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Page 1: U.S. AIR FORCE AUXILIARY Hawaii Wing...Flossie prompted activation of the state’s Catastrophic Hurri - cane Operations Plan. Wing mem bers were placed on alert in accor dance with

shelter and retreat from flood-prone areas. The aircrewsensured their warning messagewas heard in dense foliagebelow by sometimes flyingtwice over their target locations.

That evening, Gov. NeilAbercrombie declared a stateof emergency for Hawaii. Bythen, CAP aircraft were safelysecured, and personnel werepresent and on duty at emer-gency operations centersthroughout the state. For thenext two days, torrential rain,thunder and lightning, hail andhigh winds pummeled the

The Hawaii Wing is part ofthe state’s disaster prepar-

edness and response network,maintaining a 24-hours-a-day,seven-days-a-week alert onbehalf of Hawaii State CivilDefense. Its members onceagain answered the call to dutyin the summer of 2013.

On July 26, Tropical StormFlossie prompted activation ofthe state’s Catastrophic Hurri-cane Operations Plan. Wingmembers were placed on alert in accordance with long-established tropical cyclonewarning plans.

During a Unified Coordi-nating Group meeting the nextmorning, the Hawaii CountyCivil Defense Agency placedan urgent request for thewing’s aerial warning andreconnaissance support.Within moments of receivingthe final go-ahead, wing air-crews were airborne. Thewing’s planes covered theremote areas of the Big Island— locations inaccessible byroad, without cell phone cover-age and beyond the reach ofCivil Defense warning sirens.

On July 28, the counties ofMaui and Kauai also requestedCivil Air Patrol support. Fol-lowing predetermined routes,aircrews were able to notifyand warn dozens of beach-goers, kayakers, fishermen,campers and hikers to seek

U.S. AIR FORCE AUXILIARY

Hawaii Wing2013 STATISTICS

Hawaiian Islands. Moderate to major property damageresulted, but no major injuriesor fatalities were reported.

During an after-actionmeeting with emergency man-agement partners, the stateadjutant general personallypraised and thanked the mem-bers of the Hawaii Wing for ajob well done.

� Tropical Storm Flossie causedactivation of the Hawaii CatastrophicHurricane Operations Plan on July 26.

Wing Maintains 24-Hours-a-Day, 7-Days-a-Week Alert

C i t i z e n s S e r v i n g C o m m u n i t i e s

Volunteer Members353 adult members294 cadets383 voting-age members118 aircrew personnel304 emergency responders

Squadrons10 locations statewide

Aircraft10 single engine1 glider

Vehicles10 vehicles

Interoperable Communications8 VHF/FM repeaters82 VHF/FM stations16 HF stations

Missions4 search and rescue missions21 other state support missions

Cadet Flying521 cadet orientation flights

Total Hours Flown1,230

Financial$94,500 in state funding$1.5M value of wing’s volunteerhours

National CommanderMaj. Gen. Charles L. Carr Jr.([email protected])

Region CommanderCol. Brian L. Bishop ([email protected])

Wing CommanderCol. Jeffrey M. Wong ([email protected])

Government Relations AdvisorLt. Col. Carswell J. Ross Jr.([email protected])

Wing Info:419 Lele StreetHonolulu, HI 96819-1821808-836-3417www.hiwg.cap.gov

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TechnologyAdvances in technology— including digital electronic direction finders, infrared cameras that register heat signatures, real-time full-motionvideo, in-flight chat capabilitiesand airborne public address systems — have enhanced CAP’s SAR capabilities.

High-Profile Missions

Oklahoma Tornadoes— CAP groundteams photographed 13,000 property sites.

Colorado Flooding— 112 sorties and 2,763 man-hours to capture 10,061 images for FEMA.

South Dakota Blizzard — 440 geotagged photos documenting 15,000-30,000 dead livestock,

a $1.5 billion blow to the state’s economy.

Nevada SAR— Six people stranded in subzero weather saved.

By the NumbersCAP annually conducts 90 percent of inland search and rescue missions in the continental U.S. as tasked by the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center and other agencies.

550 single-engine airplanes— one of the largest fleets of single-engine piston aircraft in the world.

8,243 aircrew personnel and 4,028 ground team members.

31,854 qualified personnel trained to federal standards completed 142 disaster relief missions for federal, state and local agencies.

With aerial photography now CAP’s number one emergency services’ mission, nearly 80 percent of aircraft are equipped with cameras.

Air Force Rescue Coordination Center credited CAP's cell phone forensicsand radar forensics teams with 30+ saves.

CAP aircrews flew 1,250 hours during air defense exercises in 2013, helping prepare fighter units across the country for homeland security missions.

Aircrews conducting counterdrug and drug interdiction operations flew 7,017 hours helping law enforcement agencies seize $442 million in illegal drugs and currency, leading to 247 arrests. CAP aircrewswere involved in 188 counterdrug missions in 2013.

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Core Values CAP instills the organization’s core values in its cadets — respect, integrity, volunteer service and excellence.Cadets are drug-free role models in their communities and schools.

Community Service CAP cadets serve their communities in a myriad of ways, including collecting and distributing food andclothing to the needy, carrying out cleanup campaigns and meetinglogistical needs for aviation-related events like air shows.

Career ExplorationCAP annually offers morethan 30 National CadetSpecial Activities, rangingin focus from how to flypowered airplanes or glid-ers to mastery of emer-gency services skills andtechniques.

Flying High The opportunity to fly is themajor attraction CAP offersyouth. During 2013, CAP’spilots flew cadets on32,893 orientation flights.

EncampmentsEncampments offer cadetsin-depth training in keyaspects of the cadet pro-gram, enabling them toapply classroom principlesto real-world needs.

Wreaths Across America Every December, in all 52 wings and even overseas, cadets participate in Wreaths Across America observances, presenting the colors and placing wreaths on veterans’ graves in national cemeteries and at war memorials.

Scholarships

More than $300,000

in college and flight

scholarships are

available to CAP

cadets.

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CAP’s Aerospace Education (AE) program, consisting of inquiry-based science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) products,annually inspires over 25,000 cadets and about 250,000 K-12 students to pursue those careers.

Civil Air Patrol is a leader in thethe Air Force Association’s AllService Division national highschool CyberPatriotprogram. CAP cadets werenamed national champions in2011 and 2012, and last yearthe South Dakota team finishedfirst in competition to operateand secure a basic network.

Civil Air Patrol’s award-winningaerospace education programpromotes aerospace history,flight principles and careers.Many of the nation’s astro-nauts, pilots, engineers and scientists first explored theircareers in CAP.

Teacher Orientation Program (TOP) Flightsprovide educators the opportunity to experience firsthand theexcitement of flying and to expand their aeronautical knowledge, which benefits 25,000 students annually.

More than 30 no-cost aerospace education products and programs generate interest in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics careers for about 275,000 cadets and youth nationwide.

STEM KitsNearly 50,000 K-12 youth across the country were exposed to career exploration programs associated with astronomy, flight simulation, model and remote-controlled aircraft, robotics and rocketry, thanks to free STEM kits funded by the National Defense Education Program.

More than 20,000 youth in 28 states are K-6Aerospace Connections in Education (ACE) program kids. The no-cost program enriches academics, character education and physicalfitness with an engaging grade-specific curriculum.

The CyperPatriot program, complemented by CAP’s cyber security educational materials, isgrooming participants for futurecyber security careers.

CyberPatriots

Eye on the Future

STEM Education


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