Log in | Sign Up

Multiple Agencies Team For Large-Scale HazMat Mass Casualty Exercise At L & C

Save
Listen to the story

GODFREY – Multiple area agencies have teamed up to coordinate and conduct a large-scale HazMat mass casualty exercise for first responders Friday, March 25, on the Lewis and Clark Community College Godfrey Campus. The scene at L&C was highly active on Friday morning with an abundance of first-responder personnel on hand.

L&C has held disaster exercises on campus before, but not at this scale, and not involving students, who will be volunteering and learning from the simulation.

The drill runs from 9 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Friday, primarily in the area around the Hatheway Cultural Center.

Article continues after sponsor message
Connect with Riverbend Readers - advertise with us today!!

At least a half a dozen first response and other local mutual aid companies from across the region will be participating and that includes Lewis and Clark Community College’s Incident Management Team, Nursing Program, and Campus Safety Department, along with the Godfrey Fire Protection District, Madison County Emergency Management Agency, Alton Memorial Hospital EMS, AVEC, and the Madison County Hazardous Materials Team.

L&C said local traffic should not be affected, and bystanders should not be alarmed to see activity on campus. Several L&C administrative personnel and campus security personnel were on hand to assist with the drill and prevent outside traffic.

The exercise simulates an accidental chemical spill that results in multiple injuries and will present other potential exposure concerns requiring multiple layers of interagency response in order to manage and contain it.

“It is a new learning experience for students who have never experienced a complex incident before, as it is managed – sort of like a disaster academy,” said Chris Sichra, Godfrey Public Safety Administrator and L&C Campus Emergency Management Consultant. “While emergency scenes may appear chaotic, in reality, everything is choreographed with the same goal in mind, to save lives and mitigate the crisis.”

Prefer RiverBender on Google
Copyright 2026 Riverbender.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

More like this:

Mayor Brandon Combs Declares Emergency After Charleston, Illinois, Storm Damage
Yesterday
Madison County EMA Emergency Alert System Transitions Friday To A New Platform
May 14, 2026
Truck Ends Up in Front Yard After Crashing Into Parked Cars
4 days ago
Motorcyclist Critically Injured in Crash
Jun 11, 2026
Slusser Comments On Changes: Aging Hospital Costs Push Madison County Toward New Sites
Yesterday

 

Menu

Get the RiverBender App

Follow Us

Copyright © 2026 RiverBender.com All rights reserved.

primary

Privacy Policy | Editorial Policy | Fulfillment Policy