By Mike Isaacs
Pioneer Press Newspapers
GLENVIEW, Ill. — It’s like a scene out of “Chicago Fire,” said a member of a delegation from Indiana when he saw photos of training exercises at the Northeastern Illinois Public Safety Training Academy (NIPSTA) in Glenview.
Then the group toured the 21-acre site for first responders, which is run by an intergovernmental agency of municipalities, fire protection districts and other organizations.
His comparison, however, was a bit too limited considering how NIPSTA has evolved in recent years, according to those who run it.
NIPSTA no longer is primarily “Chicago Fire” in TV terms, but also “Chicago Police” and “Chicago Public Works” and “Chicago Paramedics” and “Chicago Emergency Medical Workers” and many other potential shows about first responders in critical situations.
When Jill Ramaker first became executive director two years ago, she was determined to expand NIPSTA’s reach, she said.
“When I first came here, about 70 percent of what we did was fire service training,” Ramaker said. “Really, the vision that I had for NIPSTA was to fill the plate.”
The full meal she had in mind included “all the different types of agencies and training that’s required for a full-scale disaster response,” she said.
So in only a couple of years, NIPSTA has become a comprehensive training center for responders in disaster health care, law enforcement, public works and much more.
She also wasted no time in bringing in the latest technology to be used in diverse training exercises, said several instructors.
One of Ramaker’s most ambitious additions was the Center For Disaster and Emergency Medicine.
“We really are on the ground floor of this program,” Ramaker told her tour group. “There was a gap that existed, and once you get through paramedic school, nothing was really out there to challenge people to use their skills and get really, really good at what they do every day.”
“Dramatic is an understatement,” said Skokie Fire Chief Jim Walters describing the changes in NIPSTA he has seen over the last two years. Walters sits on the NIPSTA executive committee and heads the committee on grounds and facilities.
“They’ve been able to get resources to be able to improve the level of training we’ve been receiving,” Walters said. “They’ve taken it to a new level. Really, we’re on track to become a one-of-a-kind training facility.”
It isn’t just a matter of increasing the kinds of first responders that are trained at the facility, although NIPSTA certainly has done that, Ramaker said; it’s also about making sure different first responders train together.
“What we’ve tried to do here at NIPSTA is to say, ‘Who are all of the different types of agencies and individuals and organizations that are going to be required to respond in a disaster, whether it’s a small-scale or catastrophic event,’” Ramaker said.
Voting members of NIPSTA include towns from Arlington Heights, Winnetka, Deerfield, Skokie, Evanston, Park Ridge and more — nearly two dozen representatives in all.
The Indiana visitors, there because they want to develop a public safety training center in their own state, got a full taste of NIPSTA.
They saw firefighters working to free “victims” in car crashes in extrication exercises; a new mobile ambulance with state-of-the-art technology; a training room in the new Center For Disaster and Emergency Medicine. They toured the sprawling grounds to see firefighter training towers and an area for trench disasters and an old rusted out commuter train that can serve as a venue for rescue training.
Inside, they saw how law enforcement personnel work with nifty virtual reality technology. In a demonstration, an officer headed to the backyard of a domestic incident that instantly turned more serious than originally believed; in another, he entered the scene of a school shooting where a student is down and a virtual officer beside him is suddenly shot.
A nearby driving simulator allows trainees to hone their driving skills in all kinds of weather conditions and emergency circumstances.
Shortly after Ramaker took over the top spot at NIPSTA, she hired former Broadview Fire Chief Tom Gaertner as deputy director. These two make up half of the four full-time staff members at NIPSTA, overseeing some 450 instructors who are experts in their fields, they say.
Some of the trainers are retired from public safety jobs, while others do this work in addition to jobs with police or fire departments or other agencies.
“There is always a lot going on here,” Gaertner said. “Not a lot of time to sleep. But we recognize the importance of the work.”
Ramaker said this rapid growth spurt is by design.
“We are about 35 percent higher in revenue than we were at this time last year,” she said. “From a business perspective, to me, that says we’re growing very fast.”
And not slowing down.
Ramaker said the new Center For Crisis Leadership is on tap for next year. NIPSTA hired a new director of campus safety. The agency will be working with Chicago first responders in a new partnership. Public works employees can now train in techniques to safely plow snow here. NIPSTA is taking on a bigger role working with school districts on their emergency plans. And it can train those in private industry as well.
In assessing NIPSTA’s activity spike, Walters remembered how people used to say for years that the agency had “great potential.” Finally, he said, that potential is being realized.
That’s because it has to be, Ramaker said.
The nature of confronting emergency situations in the 21st century — both large and small — require proper training and most importantly, a coordinated and comprehensive response, she said.
“When someone calls NIPSTA and asks if we can help, we respond always with a yes,” Ramaker said. “If we don’t have a program in place, we build one. We put it together. We won’t turn anyone away because every part of society — every part of business — is impacted by serious changes in our world today.”
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