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READY
SES ► SEARCH & RESCUE STATE EMERGENCY SERVICE
State Emergency Service
Volunteer Network · Active

SES

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When the waters rise and the roads fail, we move.

READY STATE · AMBER WATCH · WAVE 1
§ I — Search & Rescue

Search.
Rescue. Rebuild.

Floods, storms, earthquakes, missing persons. The SES coordinates volunteers, professionals, and equipment across vast areas. The Core tracks resource location, skill sets, and availability in real time.

Resource Mapping
Every vehicle, boat, chainsaw, and trained volunteer mapped by celestial coordinate. Availability status updated in real time. The Core knows who has what, where they are, and whether they're ready — before the request is issued.
Coordinate-mapped · Real-time · Skill-indexed
Volunteer Coordination
Volunteers have day jobs. The Core tracks their availability windows, skill certifications, and physical fitness. Callouts reach only those who can respond. No wasted alerts. No frustrated volunteers.
Availability-aware · Certified · Fitness-tracked
Multi-Agency Mesh
SES, fire, police, medical — all on the same federation mesh during major incidents. Shared coordinate space. Scoped access: SES sees terrain data, police sees exclusion zones, medical sees casualty locations. No silos. No leaks.
Federated · Scoped · Silo-free
Recovery Tracking
After the emergency: damage assessment, aid distribution, rebuilding coordination. Every house, every road, every bridge — mapped, assessed, prioritised. The recovery is as structured as the response.
Damage-mapped · Aid-tracked · Prioritised
Northern Depot
RA 17h 45m · DEC -29°
Vehicles: 4/12Volunteers: 18/45
Coastal Unit
RA 05h 35m · DEC -05°
Boats: 3/5Crew: 12/18
Mountain Rescue
RA 18h 36m · DEC +38°
Helos: 1/2Climbers: 6/10
§ II — Incident Feed

Live coordination.

The feed shows active requests across the SES network. Every line is a coordinate, a resource, and a decision waiting to be made. The Core ranks by urgency, capability, and distance.

TimeIDIncidentLocationStatus
08:14SES-91Tree down on primary access roadHigh RidgeDispatched
08:09SES-90Flood evacuation support requestedRiver FlatEn Route
07:52SES-89Missing walker — beacon activatedMount ValeFound
07:31SES-88Storm damage to community hallCoast RdQueued
07:18SES-87Assist fire service — containment lineNorth ScrubActive
§ III — Deployment Tiers

Scale from local unit to federation.

The same Core architecture runs a single depot or an entire national volunteer network. Add modules as your jurisdiction grows. Every tier keeps the same coordinate space, the same laws, and the same offline resilience.

TierScopeIncludes
01DepotResource mapping, volunteer roster, basic incident logging. One depot, one dispatch screen.
02RegionMulti-depot coordination, shared vehicle pool, automated callout routing, weather feeds.
03StateFederation mesh with fire, police, and medical; cross-border mutual aid; statewide capacity dashboards.
04FederationNational interoperability, mutual-aid treaties encoded, multi-jurisdiction audit and recovery tracking.
Pricing TBD →
§ IV — Storm & Flood Response

When the water rises.

Floodwater does not wait for business hours. SES crews pre-position inflatable boats, portable pumps, and sandbag fillers before a storm makes landfall. The Core matches forecast polygons to volunteer availability, so the nearest qualified swiftwater team is rolling before the first road goes under.

Swiftwater Staging
Inflatable rescue boats, outboard motors, PFDs, throw bags, and helmets are staged by catchment, not just by depot. The Core checks current certification levels — Technician, Operator, or Flood Boat Handler — before any callout is accepted, so a flood request never reaches a crew still waiting for swiftwater assessment.
Certification-gated · Catchment-staged · Pre-positioned
Levee & Catchment Monitoring
Sensor-fed river gauges, rainfall radar, and drone imagery feed into the same coordinate map as crew positions. When a levee section shows strain or a gauge crosses a trigger threshold, the nearest foot patrol receives an automatic waypoint, a reference photo, and a structured reporting template.
Sensor-fed · Waypoint-routed · Threshold-triggered
Evacuation Centre Logistics
Relief centres register displaced residents, pets, medical dependencies, and transport needs in one shared form. The Core de-duplicates entries across multiple sites, flags unaccompanied minors and medication refills, and gives logistics teams a live bed-count. When the all-clear sounds, the same record becomes a recovery-case file.
De-duplicated · Medical-flagged · Recovery-linked
Debris & Access Clearance
Chainsaw teams clear fallen trees from roads using priority tags passed from fire, ambulance, and police requests. Every cut is logged with a geotagged photo and linked to the infrastructure damage report. Councils receive an exportable job list as soon as the wind drops, so repair crews start faster.
Priority-tagged · Geotagged · Export-ready
§ V — Technical Rescue

Trapped.
Not forgotten.

Some rescues happen in the dark, upside down, or under a dashboard. SES technical-rescue teams train for scenarios where a standard stretcher will not work: crushed vehicles, collapsed trenches, vertical cliffs, and confined industrial spaces. The Core records every member's ticket, gear expiry date, and recent exercise attendance so only current, equipped crews are sent.

Road Crash Rescue
Hydraulic spreaders, cutters, rams, and stabilisation straws are tracked by serial number and inspected after every exercise. The Core links each vehicle's extrication kit to its crew's Road Crash Rescue accreditation, so a station with gear but no ticket cannot accept a crash task — and a qualified crew is never dispatched without the right tools.
Serial-tracked · Accredited · Tool-matched
Vertical Rescue
Ropes, harnesses, anchor hardware, and edge protection are logged by manufacture date, inspection date, and retirement date. Crews are rostered against cliff, tower, and mine-shaft tasks only when their Vertical Rescue ticket is in date and their personal kit has been signed off by a qualified equipment officer.
Lifecycle-logged · Ticket-checked · Officer-signed
Confined Space Rescue
Gas monitors, breathing apparatus, retrieval tripods, and communications cable are checked before every shift. The Core stores each space's hazard sheet — oxygen risk, toxic atmosphere, engulfment potential — and refuses dispatch if the assigned team lacks the monitor type or breathing set required by the entry permit.
Hazard-sheeted · Permit-matched · Pre-shift checked
Trench & Structural Collapse
Shoring panels, acrow props, vacuum trucks, and structural engineers are treated as a single rescue system. Requests are routed through a collapse supervisor who confirms soil type, wall depth, and surrounding load before any crew enters. The Core timestamps every decision for the coronial and safety investigation that may follow.
Supervisor-routed · Shoring-tracked · Audit-timestamped
§ VI — Field Command & Comms

Command beyond the grid.

When cellular towers fall and power lines come down, SES still needs to coordinate. Mobile command posts use satellite backhaul, trailer-mounted VHF repeaters, and off-grid mesh nodes. The Core caches base maps, building footprints, and hazard layers locally so tablets and rugged laptops keep working when the internet does not.

TimeIDIncidentLocationStatus
09:42COMMS-12Mobile command post online — Starlink nominal, WAN latency 180 msForward BaseOnline
09:38COMMS-11Repeater trailer deployed North Ridge — coverage Sector 4 through 7North RidgeActive
09:15COMMS-10Mesh node handoff complete — Squad Bravo from Sector 4 to Sector 7Sector BoundaryHandoff
08:55COMMS-09Fallback VHF net activated — Channel 3, all stations check inCommand NetOpen
08:31COMMS-08Offline map sync complete — 247 field tablets, 18 command laptopsAll SectorsSynced
§ VII — One Core, Every Service

SES works where
the others meet.

Search and rescue often sits at the intersection: police for missing persons, fire for hazmat and crash rescue, medical for casualties, 000 for coordination. The Core gives SES crews the same shared map, so a flood boat knows where police have closed a road and where medical has staged.

Shared Incident Map
One coordinate space for SES, fire, police, and medical. SES sees terrain, access routes, and evacuation points; other services see only the layers relevant to their roles. Updates propagate across federated cores in real time.
Federated · Scoped · Real-time
Unified Tasking Handoff
When 000 or another service requests SES assistance, the location, hazard notes, and required capabilities travel with the task. Volunteers arrive briefed instead of guessing.
Capability-matched · Context-rich · Signed
Cross-Service Safety
The Core warns SES crews when fire marks a structure unsafe or police declare an active threat zone. Safety information flows across service boundaries without exposing sensitive operational details.
Threat-aware · Role-scoped · Mutual safety
Common Memory
After the emergency, every service's record links to the same event identifier. Recovery planners, insurers, and review bodies see one coherent timeline instead of fragmented logs.
Event-linked · Timeline-consistent · Review-ready

Respond with memory.

When the grid fails, the Core remembers. When volunteers rotate, the record persists. When terrain changes, the map updates.

Reserve a Core