Crime & Safety
State Ups Funding for Hudson Valley Counter-terrorism Center
The Center combines New York Medical College's assets in disaster medicine with strategies against biological and chemical threats.

MOUNT PLEASANT, NY — New York Medical College founded the Center of Excellence in Precision Responses to Bioterrorism and Disasters in 2017. The Center is the first of its kind in the Hudson Valley.
"This Center of Excellence in Precision Responses to Bioterrorism and Disasters is designed to intensify and solidify our preparedness as a state and as a nation, and to defend against all threats, whether intentional, accidental or natural," noted Dean Robert Amler, M.D., MBA, Vice President of Government Affairs, NYMC. "The increase in funding we received this year has made it possible to provide more in-depth training, including preparing in real time for incidents of terrorism that are all too common in today's world."
New York State is providing $750,000 in 2018 to support the expansion of the Center's training program. The sum marks a major increase in funding for the Center, which had received $500,000 from the State in 2017. State Sen. Terrence Murphy and state Assemblyman Tom Abinanti held a press conference at the medical school Tuesday to announce the funding.
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"Bioterrorism poses distinctive challenges for preparedness, protection, and response," Murphy said in a press release. "New Yorkers are very much aware that we are targets for acts of terrorism. The Center allows us to be proactive. It is critical to our region's preparedness to have trained personnel who can respond to any life-threatening incident within our communities. I am proud to have secured $750,000 in funding to allow the Center to expand their mission to protect our families from catastrophic bio-terrorism and man-made disasters."
The Center combines New York Medical College's globally recognized assets in disaster medicine and medical countermeasures with individualized precision medical strategies against biological and chemical threats and seeks to translate research findings in order to protect Americans from the threat of catastrophic bioterrorism and man-made disasters.
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"It's one thing to teach someone in a well-lit, quiet room where the temperature is a comfortable seventy degrees, and another situation altogether when you're trying to work in the dark in the sweltering heat with music blaring and distraught people are all screaming at once," said Michael Reilly, DR. P.H., M.P.H, Director of the Center of Excellence in Precision Responses to Bioterrorism and Disasters for NYMC. "We train medical personnel and first responders to work under the most adverse conditions; because that is the situation they are most often going to find themselves in. We are looking forward to expanding our services and hope that with continued State support we can deliver critically needed state-of-the-art training programs."
The increased financial support will allow NYMC to expand its training programs for hospitals, health systems, and first responders throughout the State. The school had committed funding for the renovation of a new state-of-the-art dedicated training facility on its Valhalla campus that will provide additional classroom space, disaster simulation and real-world scenario-based training for first responders.
"I am pleased that we were able to increase New York's contribution to the Center of Excellence. The Center will continue to bring together the best and the brightest to develop innovative tools to shield our community from those who would destroy our way of life," said Abinanti. "I applaud the medical college's vision and perseverance in fashioning this unique program to prepare first responders at a time when bioterrorism is a significant international concern and disasters are becoming more commonplace."
Sherlita Amler, M.D., Commissioner of Health at Westchester County was on hand to represent Westchester County Executive George Latimer. Among the many other guests in attendance were Alonzo West, President of the Westchester Correction Officers Benevolent Association, Peter Dickiarra, Westchester County Correction Superior Officers Association, and Brian Gates Senior Vice President, Hudson Valley Development Corporation.
"I was working on 9/11. It was a quiet day. Someone called and said a plane had struck the World Trade Center. Then another plane hit. All of the sudden the world changed in an instant and was never the same," remembered John Hodges, Chief Inspector for the Westchester County Police. "Training is the vital element that allows us to respond efficiently. The Center of Excellence is a tremendous asset that allows us to prepare under austere, real-life conditions."
New York State has established and currently supports 11 Centers of Excellence throughout the State. Three such centers exist in Rochester, two each in Buffalo and Long Island, and one in Syracuse, Albany, and Binghamton. Prior to the opening of this Center in Valhalla, the Hudson Valley had none.
PHOTO/ State Sen. Terrence Murphy's Office
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