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Global Rescue delivers urgent supplies to clients in Northern Japan

Global Rescue security teams have provided urgent aid to clients in Northern Japan whose supplies were nearly exhausted in the aftermath of last week’s tsunami.

Global Rescue security teams have provided urgent aid to clients in Northern Japan whose supplies were nearly exhausted in the aftermath of last week’s tsunami.

Teams transported food, water, fuel and other basic necessities to employees and their families living in and around Sendai, including medicines for the ill, and essential business equipment to a client who was unable to access the company’s offices. The teams were required to take alternate routes due to closed highways and destroyed infrastructure.

Global Rescue continues to oversee the safety of its clients throughout Japan and is monitoring reports of nuclear radiation levels in urban areas that could rise depending on meteorological conditions. The company’s on-site crisis response professionals are providing security advice on how to shelter-in-place, have created command structures in the event of an emergency and have established evacuation contingency plans involving both land and air assets which would be implemented should there be indications that radiation in those areas is approaching harmful levels.

Three corporations with an active presence in Japan have retained Global Rescue’s services for more than 200 employees.

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Voice of America highlights Global Rescue’s crisis response plans in Japan

The Voice of America recently interviewed Global Rescue CEO Dan Richardsabout the company's preparation in Japan:

The Voice of America recently interviewed Global Rescue CEO Dan Richardsabout the company’s preparation in Japan:

Private security companies that specialize in civilian rescue operations say that despite the horrific scenes coming out of Japan, the country is probably better prepared for disaster than almost any other nation in the world.

Thousands of foreign nationals are trying to get out Japan and away from its rising chaos and nuclear threat. And help is available – from private companies with experience in such situations.

Daniel Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, based in Boston, Massachusetts, said, “We obviously do know that the country, Japan, for a long time has suffered from earthquake and tsunami threats and that these events do sometimes occur. So, as a company that has clients who rely on us for these types of crisis response services in this region, we have been preparing for these kinds of events in this region due to the frequency with which they occur.”

Global Rescue has been involved in a number of large scale evacuations, most recently in Libya…

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Voice of America – Private Companies on Standby to Aid in Evacuations From Japan

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Global Rescue on standby to evacuate clients in Japan as radiation risks loom

Global Rescue continues to oversee the safety of its clients in Japan and is monitoring reports of nuclear radiation levels in urban areas where those levels could rise depending on meteorological conditions.

Global Rescue continues to oversee the safety of its clients in Japan and is monitoring reports of nuclear radiation levels in urban areas where those levels could rise depending on meteorological conditions.

The company’s on-site crisis response professionals are providing security advice on how to shelter-in-place, are creating command structures in the event of an emergency and have established evacuation contingency plans involving both land and air assets which would be implemented should there be indications that radiation in those areas is approaching harmful levels.

Two corporations with an active presence in Japan have retained Global Rescue’s services to more than 150 employees.

“Nobody yet knows how bad this is going to get,” said Global Rescue CEO Dan Richards, “but our teams are prepared to evacuate immediately should the need arise.”

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Global Rescue Security Manager Wins Winter ‘Death Race,’ Prepares for June Edition

Global Rescue Security Manager and Navy SEAL, Daniel Bayer, took first place in the 2011 winter edition of the ‘Death Race,’ a grueling trial of fitness and cold-weather survival held every year in Pittsfield, VT.

Global Rescue Security Manager and Navy SEAL, Daniel Bayer, took first place in the 2011 winter edition of the ‘Death Race,’ a grueling trial of fitness and cold-weather survival held every year in Pittsfield, VT.  Described by the New York Times as “300” meets “Survivor”, and by Outside magazine as a “demented sufferfest”, the Death Race is a sadistic stew of running, crawling, manure-hauling, barbed-wire navigating, wood chopping, and any other agony-inducing activity that springs to the mind of the event’s creator, Joe Desena, who mixes up the course every year. Of the 20 elite participants, only half of them finished.

However, Bayer has deep experience operating in difficult environments. As a veteran of four combat deployments as a Navy SEAL, and as a team leader of Global Rescue’s security evacuations from the 2010 earthquake in Haiti and January’s revolution in Egypt, he is regularly tasked with missions that have moving parts to coordinate, unforeseen obstacles to overcome and physical challenges.

After four hours of warm-ups, the athletes took off for their first ascent of one of the peaks near Killington ski resort at 10PM on March 4th, each carrying a log under an arm. Then they carried two logs for the second loop, then three and then four.  Twenty-six miles in total, all done on snowshoes except for the first leg, where racers slogged uphill without them, pulling their legs out of the crusty, thigh-deep snow most of the time.

After the mountain marathon came the rock carry: digging dozens of slimy stones out of the bed of an ice-cold river, and carrying them three-quarters of a mile in buckets – weighing about 80 to 100 pounds in each hand – to a spot where they built three-foot cairns. Their hands completely numb, the competitors were asked to construct two bird houses, testing fine motor skills in sub-freezing conditions. Next up, wheel-barrowing, quartering and stacking 30 logs, and then shoveling wet snow away from a chicken coop.

The final hurdle was a winter nightmare: submerging themselves and holding their breath for an aggregate 60 seconds in a frozen pond, and emerging to recite a tongue-twister given to them to memorize at the beginning of the race. 

Bayer finished in 19 hours, 28 minutes — about 45 minutes in front of second place. The secret, he said, was proper planning, such as what and when to eat, and just plain mental toughness.

“The biggest differentiator is the way people fueled, how they were dressed and how they dealt with pain,” Bayer said. “People deal with pain differently and that’s what this competition is all about.”

In addition to his security duties at Global Rescue, Bayer oversees physical training at the company’s Boston Operations Center, a regimen fondly known as the GRRT: the Global Rescue Readiness Training. One part cross training, one part powerlifting and one part mental-agility exercise, the GRRT test is a standard that all operations staff must meet in order to be eligible for deployment.

Dan Bayer will take his physical training to the next level to prepare for the next challenge on his agenda – the summer edition of the Death Race, scheduled for June.

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Communications expert Richard Levick explores crisis response with Global Rescue in his new book

A newly released book from crisis communications expert Richard Levick, The Communicators: Leadership in the Age of Crisis, looks at how corporations respond to emergencies.

A newly released book from crisis communications expert Richard Levick, The Communicators: Leadership in the Age of Crisis, looks at how corporations respond to emergencies.

The book features a forward by Steve Forbes and interviews and commentary from some of the world’s leading experts in crisis communication and response.  In section three, “The Need for a Crisis Culture,” Levick interviews Global Rescue CEO Dan Richards on the topic:

As the chief executive of Global Rescue, Daniel Richards is never surprised when he hears from a company that needs help rescuing employees stuck in a foreign battle zone. As his company name makes clear, helping people out of serious, often life-threatening jams is what they do best.

What does surprise Richards, time after time, is how many companies face perilous situations totally unprepared even though they’re the ones who sent the employees into a troubled area to begin with.

“Those are the 2 a.m. phone calls that come into our operations center from a company with 10 people in Lebanon as the Hezbollah-Israeli conflict is starting, and they’ve got no idea what to do. We’ve actually had that happen,” Richards says.

Chaos and panic are two of the expected results of such unpreparedness. Even more insidious is when different departments in a company form silos to protect their own interests. “When it comes time to actually mobilize a response, different departments in the company can even act in anobstructionist way, interfering with people trying to solve the crisis,” Richards says.

Such obstructionism is extremely destructive under any circumstance and all the more tragic when lives are at risk. The bottom line is that you cannot assume that your teams will do the right thing (even when they are well-meaning), especially when the right thing calls for change. Crisis response

is not about self-preservation, but about team preservation. It requires a coordinated effort to save the most critical things first, regardless of territory. If people fight turf wars when lives are in jeopardy, imagine how much more fiercely self-interested their behavior in non-life-threatening crises will be.

“We had a Fortune 25 company call us and retain us to go get their people. The way they approached retaining us, from the beginning, was not dissimilar from the way they’d approach retaining a company that supplied nuts and bolts.

Purchasing was involved, and procurement, and legal, and everybody wanted something,” he says. “Finally…a C-level individual had to assert himself in order to get through all of the crippling bureaucracy that was going to prevent us from doing the things that needed to be done. We’ve seen that over and over. Sometimes these organizations get out of their own way and let the problem be solved, and sometimes they don’t.”

While not all situations are so life-critical, more commonplace crises can be just as debilitating. As Richards says, “All you have to do is pick up the paper to see that a lot of companies aren’t prepared for financial crises either.”

Too often, companies go through elaborate motions by preparing an exhaustively detailed crisis preparation plan, only to file the plan away and return to business as usual.

“There’s a very big market today for crisis consultants, disaster preparedness, redundancy of systems, and other things,” Richards says. The real test comes in putting the plan to use during an actual event. If only one or two people in your company remember the contents of the plan, that’s as good as having no plan at all.

To make the plan viable, you’ll need an ongoing crisis team that actively and regularly trains for a variety of emergency situations. “The saying is that generals are always fighting the last war,” Richards says. “Well, people are always preparing for what they have experience with, and that typically is the last crisis they faced. The problem is that, as the nature of the future crisis changes or the frequency or magnitude changes, you may not be prepared.”

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The Communicators: Leadership in the Age of Crisis – “The Need for a Crisis Culture”

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Boston Herald discusses tsunami damage with Global Rescue

The Boston Herald's Donna Goodison discusses tsunami damage with Global Rescue's CEO Dan Richards:

The Boston Herald’s Donna Goodison discusses tsunami damage with Global Rescue’s CEO Dan Richards:

Bay State businesses scrambled to recover from yesterday’s massive earthquake in Japan, with one firm asking employees to sleep at a Tokyo office because commuting is impossible.

But the first order of business was making sure everyone was safe.

Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, a Hub-based medical evacuation company with some corporate clients in the hardest-hit areas of the quake zone, said it will take time to account for everyone.

“There’s been some pretty severe infrastructure disruptions, and that includes communication capabilities. It’s not uncommon in these disaster-type scenarios for people to go unaccounted for a period of time,” he said.

More than 200 New England companies have operations in Japan, according to the Massachusetts Office of International Trade & Investment, and the Asian nation — which has the world’s third largest economy — is Massachusetts’ fifth-largest trading partner.

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Global Rescue helps clients in Japan after earthquake, tsunami

Global Rescue is assisting corporate clients whose employees and operations have been affected by Friday’s tsunami and earthquake in Japan.

Global Rescue is assisting corporate clients whose employees and operations have been affected by Friday’s tsunami and earthquake in Japan.

The company’s crisis response professionals are advising clients regarding how shelter-in-place, coordinating flights out of the country and monitoring the safety of those in impacted areas. The operations team is also helping clients make sure all impacted employees are accounted for, a task made more challenging in northeastern Japan where the earthquake and tsunami has damaged much of the communications infrastructure.

While there have been no reported injuries or security threats to Global Rescue members thus far, several thousand remain missing in areas where the devastation is most severe. Global Rescue has placed local assets on standby should a large scale evacuation become necessary.

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The Boston Herald – Bay State companies shaken but safe

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Fortune/CNN – How companies get employees out of global hotspots