Isle of Man Civil Defence Corps

Isle of Man Civil Defence Corps
Active 1949-present
Country Isle of Man
Type Civil Defence Corps
Size 50+ personnel
Part of Department of Home Affairs
Garrison/HQ EPU & CDC HQ, Douglas
Colours Blue and orange
Commanders
Emergency Planning Co-ordinator Ian Young
Commandant Tony Glen
Minister of the Dept of Home Affairs The Hon Juan Watterson MHK
Insignia
Civil Defence Corps badge
Ensign
Tactical Recognition Flash

The Isle of Man Civil Defence Corps is one of the five emergency services maintained by the Isle of Man Government, to provide a range of emergency responses on the Isle of Man, an independent Crown dependency located in the Irish Sea between England and Ireland. The Corps operates under the Department of Home Affairs.

History

The Civil Defence Corps was founded in 1949 by the United Kingdom Government, and operated throughout England, Scotland, and Wales, as well as on the Isle of Man. Its primary purpose was to co-ordinate civil defence in the event of a nuclear attack during the Cold War period. It was largely disbanded in 1968 (although some specialist units lasted longer in connection with special duties). The Isle of Man is not part of the United Kingdom, and in 1968 the Isle of Man Government decided not to disband its Division of the Civil Defence Corps, and it has continued to operate ever since, as the IOM Civil Defence Corps.[1] Similar organisations continue to operate in New Zealand, Iceland, Eire, and Australia.

Structure and ranks

The Minister of Home Affairs is the senior elected politician responsible for the Department which controls the Civil Defence Corps. The senior manager is the IOM Emergency Planning Co-ordinator. The person holding this appointment is the head of the island's Emergency Planning Unit (EPU), which is an executive organisation under Government control, providing emergency planning solutions to both Government and the private sector. The Emergency Planning Co-ordinator is essentially a civil servant, but he is a uniformed officer, with rank markings which resemble those of a Police Commander, and the Civil Defence Corps cap badge on his headdress. The Civil Defence Corps as an operational unit, under the supervision of the Emergency Planning Co-ordinator, is headed by a Commandant.[2] The members are divided into five teams, each headed by a Team Leader and a Deputy Team Leader.

Equipment

Civil Defence Corps teams operate in all-terrain vehicles in a blue livery, with Civil Defence markings. As a front line emergency service they operate with strobing blue lights and sirens. Vehicles carry basic first aid and rescue equipment. They also operate a fleet of minibuses for personnel transport and civilian evacuation, as well as mobile command centres and catering units. Trailers are operated with equipment including mobile lighting units and generators, and air tents.

Responsibilities

Civil Defence Corps teams carry out training on Wednesday nights throughout the year. They are responsible for a range of duties including establishing a command post in connection with any civil emergency, and evacuating the civilian population where necessary.[3] The key areas of responsibility for the CDC are defined as:

Ceremonial function

As an emergency service the Civil Defence Corps maintains a military-style discipline, and its members wear uniform. This also allows them to be deployed on ceremonial duties in processions and parades ranging from Remembrance Sunday to the island's Tynwald Day. The Civil Defence Corps flag is paraded on such occasions by the Corps Standard Bearer, and uniformed members march in support of the flag.[4]

Isle of Man Inland Search and Rescue Group

The IOMISRG is a joint force consisting of volunteers from four of the five official Government emergency services on the Isle of Man, namely the IOM Constabulary, the IOM Coastguard, the IOM Civil Defence Corps, and the IOM Fire and Rescue Service. The umbrella organisation provides a forum for joint planning and management, as well as jointly resourced operational inland search and rescue teams.[5] The joint organisation maintains the island's only trained SARDA (Search and Rescue Dog Association) dog and handler.

Emergency services on the Isle of Man

References

  1. See the organisation's history in this leaflet.
  2. Structure and ranks are outlined at this webpage of the EPU.
  3. Details on the CDC webpage here.
  4. Ceremonial duties outlined on the final page of this information flyer.
  5. The organisation is fully detailed in a PDF fact sheet which may be downloaded here.