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.
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.
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.
| Tier | Scope | Includes |
|---|---|---|
| 01 | Depot | Resource mapping, volunteer roster, basic incident logging. One depot, one dispatch screen. |
| 02 | Region | Multi-depot coordination, shared vehicle pool, automated callout routing, weather feeds. |
| 03 | State | Federation mesh with fire, police, and medical; cross-border mutual aid; statewide capacity dashboards. |
| 04 | Federation | National interoperability, mutual-aid treaties encoded, multi-jurisdiction audit and recovery tracking. |
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.
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.
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.
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.