NexStar – completely fake emergency. Severe floods affected the fake city of Texas and Widland, before Hurricane EF-3 declined in the city after less than a day, causing damage to the major infrastructure, contempt and injury of thousands of people in a four-province area, and obstructing the passenger train.
Again, the emergency is completely formed, but for students in The Emergency Administration Academy at the Ministry of Emergency in TexasIt is an opportunity to put eight months of training training.

Exercise is Cowrt’s Capstone before graduating in the government building on Friday. The program is not different from anything in the country, which gives its students experience and knowledge about how to deal with all stages of emergency management, from preparing, responding to recovery and mitigation.
TDEM says the goal of the program is to train future emergency managers. In essence, the agency is responsible for communication and coordination with local and state resources that respond to emergency situations throughout the state, such as forest fires, floods and winter storms.
Emergency managers are usually the first respondents who see them fighting forest fires or saving people from water flooded. It plays an important role behind the scenes, coordinating the response from the EOS Center (EOC).
The third group is now at the end of its cycle and puts their knowledge of the test in the Needland disaster. Lisa Ruby, who graduated in the first group of the academy, is now in favor of TDEM and is a program training coordinator.
“This gives them courage and experience to go out and do so in the real world,” Ruby explained. At the end of the academy, students can apply for positions within TDEM or take their acquaintances and skills to other Texas states or even other states and countries.
“It takes everyone to respond to a disaster and TDEM is the advantage of support that helps all our local societies to see it, and the presence of these partners and our work together and we have the same knowledge and training is very important to build the future.”
A variety of applicants
People of all different ages and educational backgrounds are qualified to apply for the program. There is no need to get a background in emergency management. In the first two, the program received 350 applicants from 20 different states and four different countries.
A TDEM spokesman said that applicants could search for a second or outside school. JackLynn Peña is one of the 24 Cadette in the third regiment. She obtained a master’s degree in disaster studies from the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. She said the program was very useful.

“So whenever we go to real life, we know what to do,” Benia said.