In 2010, the U.S. Senate designated the week leading up to Memorial Day weekend as National Search and Rescue Week. It’s a time meant to honor and recognize the tireless, often invisible work of search and rescue professionals and volunteers across the country. From deep wilderness recoveries to urban searches, search and rescue teams quietly and skillfully step in when lives hang in the balance.
For many, the image of search and rescue might conjure dramatic helicopter footage or news reports of daring wilderness rescues. While these scenarios certainly exist, the reality is often more grounded, more arduous and relies heavily on the tireless efforts of everyday citizens who volunteer their time, skills and often their own resources.
This year, National Search and Rescue Week (May 16 through May 22) hit with particular resonance for my team, because instead of slowing down to reflect, we found ourselves in the thick of back-to-back missions that reminded us exactly why we do what we do.
Our first callout was for a missing fourth grader who hadn’t come home from school. What began as a localized search quickly turned into an eighteen-hour, multi-agency operation spanning over a dozen square miles in the urban and urban-wilderness interface, a landscape far more challenging to navigate than one might imagine. Mutual aid came in from neighboring counties. Law enforcement coordinated logistics. Search and rescue volunteers, many of whom had just finished a full day’s work, stayed on their feet for over thirty hours straight. The end result? A successful find and one very relieved family.
After a couple hours of sleep and a fresh cup of coffee (maybe two), the second call came in: tornadoes. Three of them. Touching down in the rural reaches of our county, they tore through fields, homes and small communities. Our mission shifted from search to damage assessment. We rolled out alongside fire departments and emergency management crews, working systematically to identify hazardous areas and determine where we were needed most. This time, thanks to effective reverse-911 systems and emergency preparedness, no lives were lost. A small mercy.
These kinds of weeks are exhausting, humbling and rewarding and why search and rescue volunteers exist. We don’t do it for recognition or accolades. We do it because someone has to. Because when the unthinkable happens, someone has to show up, whether it’s 2 AM, raining sideways or 105 degrees in the shade.
The importance of volunteer search and rescue cannot be overstated. We provide a critical lifeline in situations where time is of the essence and specialized skills are required. We augment the capabilities of paid emergency services, often possessing unique expertise in areas like wilderness navigation, tracking, technical rescue and search management. Our local knowledge and community ties are invaluable assets in understanding the terrain and the potential whereabouts of those missing.
The dedication is immense. Volunteers invest countless hours in training, maintaining equipment and responding to missions, often at personal cost. The emotional toll can be significant, bearing witness to human vulnerability and the anxieties of those in crisis. Yet, we continue to answer the call, driven by a profound sense of responsibility and the immense satisfaction of a successful rescue.
But that doesn’t mean we don’t appreciate the designation of National Search and Rescue Week. It’s a moment to pause (if we’re lucky), maybe fire up the grill and enjoy some quiet time with our families, who sacrifice along with us. It’s a chance to reflect on missions past, prepare for missions ahead and most importantly, urge others to be prepared.
If you’d like to honor search and rescue volunteers this week, here’s the best way:
- Let someone know where you’re going when you head out.
- Take the ten essentials on every outdoor trip.
- Keep your phone charged, with offline maps downloaded.
- Respect weather forecasts and trail warnings.
- And if you ever do need help, stay put and stay calm. We’ll come find you.
Here’s to a quiet week, a restful Memorial Day and a safe summer for all. We’re here 24/7, ready to go. But we’d be happy not to see you out in the field.
Stay safe out there.