 Emergency responders conduct a pre-accident drill, at Desiderio Army Airfield, January 23, 2024, on US Army garrison Humphreys. The drill tested the responders' ability to react to a downed aircraft emergency scenario. Responders were required to make an assessment of the scene, extract mock casualties from a CH-47 Chinook, and treat mock casualties, in addition to other rescue and recovery elements. B-Roll includes, interview of Chief Warrant Officer 2 Ryan Chambers, Airfield Safety Officer for Desiderio Army A-Field. The Airfield division conducts these pre-accident drills for many reasons, outside of being required. First, and perhaps most important, is the emergency response teams involved in the rescue and recovery operations. They conduct their training on a regular basis as individual life-saving assets, but these training events give us the opportunity to synchronize our training into one collective complex exercise. We change the scenarios, we try to introduce new injects to try to diversify and maximize our training as much as possible for all players involved each quarter. Realism and the train-to-fight mentality that's absolutely vital for these types of training events. CBT Ryan Chambers, Airfield Safety Desiderio. So we just conducted the second quarter fiscal year 24 Airfield Division pre-accident drill. The Airfield division conducts these pre-accident drills for many reasons, outside of being required. First and perhaps most important is the emergency response teams involved in the rescue and recovery operations. They conduct their training on a regular basis as individual life-saving assets, but these training exercises give us the opportunity to synchronize our training into one collective complex exercise. We change the scenarios, we try to introduce new injects to try to diversify and maximize the training as much as possible for all players involved each quarter. Realism and the train-to-fight mentality that's absolutely vital for these types of training events. These drills also provide us the opportunity to validate and refine our current procedures to ensure that we're the most effective and efficient as possible to respond to real emergencies. Okay, that was great. Give me five extra seconds to make it a little bit of this ambient noise.