Syracuse airport to hold live-fire training and emergency exercise this week

The Syracuse airport says it’ll conduct live-fire training Wednesday through Friday and an emergency exercise on Saturday. Both will involve an increased presence of emergency-response vehicles. (Photo credit: zoeyadvertising.com)

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse Hancock International Airport (SYR) says it will conduct live-fire training and its triennial full-scale emergency exercise this week. The federally mandated training will begin with daily and nightly live-fire training on Wednesday. It will culminate with the full-scale, emergency-response exercise on Saturday, the Syracuse Regional Airport Authority (SRAA) said Monday. During […]

Already an Subcriber? Log in

Get Instant Access to This Article

Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse Hancock International Airport (SYR) says it will conduct live-fire training and its triennial full-scale emergency exercise this week. The federally mandated training will begin with daily and nightly live-fire training on Wednesday. It will culminate with the full-scale, emergency-response exercise on Saturday, the Syracuse Regional Airport Authority (SRAA) said Monday. During the live-fire training Wednesday through Friday, travelers at and near the airport may notice fire, smoke, and an increased presence of emergency-response vehicles, SRAA said. During the triennial full-scale emergency exercise Saturday morning, travelers may notice an increased presence of emergency-response vehicles, actors on the airfield and inside the terminal building, along with smoke and fire. “The triennial full-scale exercise is an essential tool to prepare people throughout the airport ecosystem to respond swiftly and with purpose in the event of a real emergency,” Jason Terreri, SRAA executive director, said in the announcement. “We greatly appreciate the support and volunteerism of our surrounding emergency response agencies, airport tenants, and workers throughout the airport who help bring this large production to fruition every three years.”
Eric Reinhardt: