R
Radio Direction Finding Team (Electronic Search Team)
Teams use
radio direction finding equipment to locate distress beacons
(such as emergency locator transmitters, emergency position
indicating radio beacons, and personal locator beacons). Beacons
may be located in remote or populated areas, as teams can expect
to work in varied localities, including airfields, marinas,
and geographically secluded areas.
Radiological
Material
Any
material that spontaneously emits ionizing radiation. (National Fire Protection Association [NFPA] Standard # 472)
Rapid
Needs Assessment (RNA) Team
Team provides a rapid assessment capability immediately following
a major disaster or emergency. The
RNA Team will collect and provide information to determine
requirements for critical resources needed to support emergency
response activities. The
RNA Team is responsible for assessing both overall impact of
a disaster event and determining Federal and/or State immediate
response requirements.
Release
Any
spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, discharging,
injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing into the
environment (including the abandonment or discharging of barrels,
containers, and other closed receptacles containing any hazardous
substance or pollutant or contaminant). (Section 101[22] CERCLA)
Rescue
To
access, stabilize, and evacuate distressed or injured individuals
by whatever means necessary to ensure their timely transfer
to appropriate care or to a place of safety.
Rope
Rescue (High-Angle Rescue; Low-Angle Rescue; Technical Rescue)
To
rescue through the use of rigging techniques, anchor systems,
belays, mechanical advantages, subject extrication techniques,
and low- and high-angle rescue techniques.
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