Labrador's new search and rescue teams aim to provide quicker response when disaster strikes - Action News
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Labrador's new search and rescue teams aim to provide quicker response when disaster strikes

Members of teams in Forteau and Mary's Harbour are training, with recruitment ongoing for a team in Cartwright.

Members of teams in Forteau and Mary's Harbour are training, with recruitment ongoing for Cartwright team

Three men, one dressed in neon orange, sit at a table examining maps and a compass.
Members of the newly created Labrador Straits Search and Rescue Team learned a number of skills in recent workshops, including navigation when searching for missing persons. (Newfoundland and Labrador Search and Rescue Association)

Troy Normore is used to helping people in distress.

So the chief of the L'Anse au Loupvolunteer fire department jumped at the opportunity to be involved with the newly created Labrador Straits Search and Rescue in Forteau and is now the team's co-ordinator.

"Before when someone got lost or whatever the case may be, the Rangers would be called, and just local people with knowledge of the area, to go in," Normore said.

"This will be a great team to have in our area to assure the people of southern Labrador that they have a trained group of individuals that are ready for any type of search mission."

The new ground search and rescue team in Forteauand a corresponding team in Mary's Harbour were established this year after an inquiry into provincial ground search and rescue resources identified a need for more established teams in Labrador.

The teams were created after community and RCMP consultations, and Roger Gooby, executive director of the Newfoundland and LabradorSearch And Rescue Association, said they're working to establish a team in Cartwright as well.

"It's great for us to be able to see the progress that's happening and we certainly look forward to working with these groups in the future," Gooby said.

A man smiles while lying bundled up in a tarp in a search and rescue stretcher.
Volunteers learned how to transport injured persons on sleds as part of their training with the provincial search and rescue association this month. (Newfoundland and Labrador Search and Rescue Association)

Normore said his team has about 22 applicants so farand had 14 members at a training workshop last week. They're working on getting their paperwork sorted with the RCMPsothey can go out on searches.

He said two events 14-year-old Burton Winters going missing on the ice near Makkovik and two fishermen going missing off the coast of Mary's Harbour had an effect on him. Burton's body was recovered, while the fishermen were lost, andfamily members raised concerns about a lack of support and co-ordination of search and rescue teams.

"It wasn't good to see, obviously, these people going missing and not having the appropriate training resources in the area to look for these people or to assist others," Normore said. He said he thinks the tragedies also

"It definitely affects the government, to finally realize that this team is needed for this area," he said. "I hope that they continue to give us this support along our endeavours and help us out in any way that they can."

The Forteau group is looking for a place to store itssearch and rescue equipment and charge machines, Normore said. They will have ice rescue training with Labrador Southeast Coast Search and Rescue in Mary's Harbour in April.

It hasn't been easy to provide training in every community, Gooby said, because of Labrador's geography. Gooby said they're also having difficultygetting enough people for the Cartwright team, he said.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador