USCG Helicopter Rescue Swimmer AST A School (02-24)

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The primary mission of the Coast Guard Helicopter Rescue Swimmer (RS) Program, is to provide Rotary Wing (RW) stations with the deployment capability of a properly trained and conditioned person to assist distressed parties in the maritime environment. The stated primary mission should not be construed as a restriction on other operational requirements, when determined appropriate by the operational commander, for deployment of the RS.

Arguably the most widely recognized team of rescue-swimmer operators, the elite United States Coast Guard Aviation Survival Technician (AST)/Helicopter Rescue Swimmer team is called upon to respond in the most extreme rescue situations. High seas, medical evacuations, downed aviators, sinking vessels, and hurricanes are some of the deadly scenarios that Coast Guard rescue swimmers are trained to handle. The Coast Guard's team of ASTs is composed of about 350 active-duty members, and only 1085 members have passed the training to become Helicopter Rescue Swimmers since the mid-1980s.

AST A School in now Petaluma, California lasts for 24 weeks, and includes intense physical fitness, long hours of pool fitness and instruction, extreme water-confidence drills, and classroom instruction. The Coast Guard rescue swimmer training program is very challenging and is one of the toughest U.S. military training courses. Reportedly, only 75–100 Coast Guard personnel attend the school each year. The attrition rate in some years has been as high as 80%, although the 10-year average is just over 54%. Prospective U.S. Coast Guard rescue swimmers are physically conditioned to meet high physical fitness standards. About half of prospective candidates make it to AST "A" School. Upon graduation, candidates must attend seven weeks of training at the Coast Guard's Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) school in Petaluma, California, where ASTs become EMT qualified. Rescue swimmers at Coast Guard Air Station Sitka, Alaska, must maintain the EMT-Intermediate level of proficiency due to the remoteness of their operational area and the number of medical evacuations performed by that unit each year. Once stationed at a Coast Guard Air Station, apprentice ASTs must complete 6 months of qualification on their respective airframe before moving on to finish their rescue swimmer syllabus and becoming journeymen.

The Coast Guard holds a one-week Advanced Helicopter Rescue School (AHRS, formerly known as Advanced Rescue Swimmer School) at Coast Guard Station Cape Disappointment, Washington, which is host to Air Force pararescuemen (PJs), Navy rescue swimmers, and foreign rescue departments as well. There, students learn the challenges of vertical-surface rescue, cliff operations, sea-cave traversing, and extreme-high-seas rescue. AHRS is considered the premier helicopter-rescue training school of its kind by most military and civilian rescue operators.

The graduating class of 02-24:
RS# 1079 AST3 Ben Barden - Air Station Clearwater, FL
RS# 1080 AST3 Derick Andre - Air Station Elizabeth City, NC
RS# 1081 AST3 Brad Beauchamp - Air Station Traverse City, MI
RS# 1082 AST3 Max Cimoli - Air Station Atlantic City, NJ
RS# 1083 AST3 Sam Crow - Air Station North Bend, OR
RS# 1084 AST3 Garrett Grounds - Air Station Kodiak, AK
RS# 1085 AST3 Andre Laserna - Air Station Detroit, MI

Instagram: @drelaserna
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Congratulations guys, now go do big things.
#243

kurtrevels
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My husband is going to boot camp April 2nd and this is the job he wants to do🙏🏼

Juliev
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Honestly, this video would've made me join the CG vs the USMC(no regrets on joining though). This is a great recruiting video

Blaq_Phantom
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Been helping my buddy train up his freshman son for this job. Buddy was a rescue swimmer for about 8 years, us together with our training are making a monster for the program for sure. Can't wait till that man graduates HS and goes to the program around the time I finish the pipeline.

ThinBlueLineGuardian
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I’m currently training to leave on an Air Force Special Warfare contract, with the goal of being a PJ. This stuff is awesome to watch! Working on a lot of water confidence stuff every week. 💪🏼

ethannorton
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My great respect to Human Dolphins! Great memories with USCG; from Bud Class 177! ❤️🇺🇸

johndoe-miun
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The part at 3:00 was badass man, whole video at that.

BranditoT
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The work you do is very admirable and respectable. I'm a helicopter rescue swimmer for the Argentine Coast Guard, and the USCG videos have been my motivation since I was little... So others may live

fernandodinardo
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Im from Porto Alegre, South of Brasil and work in a SAR team too onbord a A119 helicopter. Our State was floodded in May, a great disaster. Good and blessed work my friend!!!

aviacaoderesgate
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Jesus, Mary, Joseph, and the Donkey….those swims in the beginning of the video in those seas….GNARLY.

GallowsPole
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y'all are some BAMFs! hope you're taking it easy out there and getting some fun ones 🌊🤙

willkoehn
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I’m a nonrate and I’m leaning towards ast anyway I could get in touch to get a more in depth way to prepare for a school and just what to expect

chrisguillen
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Great video. Thank you guys for what you do.

aidend
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You see rigorous, miserable training. I see a group of dudes making an unbreakable bond that will last a lifetime.

iannelson
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beast shit. I go to bootcamp may 14th, not going AST as I suck at swimming

lotsofsauce
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Can y’all post a graduation ceremony video? I wanna see what that’s like.

HunterGoodacre
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Seeing this video and how cool these guys are. I knew from the first time I watched this video that’s who I wanted to become. I would love to go into the Cost Guard, Air Force, Army, etc… Sadly medication is the one barrier keeping me from starting my journey.

Emberfox
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Can soldiers from other nations take the course?

andersonbanzatto
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Great video, Andre. What kind of camera did you use to film this?

TheIndieMusicSource
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My biggest regret in my life, I should've signed up. Oh well...

robr
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