Yep he is spot on. Being in Cali you will most likely need to contact your local Sheriff to see what sar teams are in your area. You will need to get a first responder type medical cert like NSP provides but after that they can help you with the rest.
Oh some sheriff teams are paid SAR as I have worked with a few counties that are well funded and very good. You will need to go threough part of the acadamy.
Yosar uses a few climbers out of camp 4 but allot of the team is park service or concessions employees and new rangers. Been on the team for the last 5 years as a Yodog handler.
Sar in Cali is done with help from the state mutual aid CAL EMA and everyone is classified to do what they have been tested to do like mountain rescue or just a ground pounder to a K9 handler.

Originally Posted by
wildmed
So to clarify.... very few people get paid for SAR in the US. The only full team that comes to mind is YoSAR in Yosemite, and they are basically a bunch of 5.11+ trad climbers that live in the valley and get paid on call to perform rescue under the supervision of full time climbing rangers. It is hardly a career, but definitely a fun seasonal job if you like living out of a tent and risking your life for pennies. The only people who get paid a decent salary for any sort of regular SAR is climbing rangers, and that is a completely different, and competitive path.
On top of that there are 3 types of SAR; Mountain Rescue (MRA accredited teams) and ground search and rescue (Nasar), and urban search and rescue(USAR or local FD). Ground Search and rescue teams mostly search for lost, overdue parties ect. Urban search and rescue does technical rescue in an urban environment in events such as a natural disaster. Mountain rescue teams provides everything from technical climbing rescue and lost party search in foothills to high alpine terrain. All of these teams are composed of volunteers (NASAR/MRA)or FD members(USAR).
Teams vary greatly in application and training. Some teams you can almost walk on to. Some of the more prestigious teams require an entrance interview, up to 1.5yrs of training and a final vote AFTER training, these teams are very selective and only take people with the best technical skills and mindset.
My best advice is to just do a google search for SAR in your area, see what comes up, then talk to members of that team on how to join. Good luck and have fun with your new interest! EMS is a fun field of work, Wilderness EMS is even more fun!
Last edited by Gooseberry; 08-08-2011 at 01:37 PM.
2000 7.3 E350 PSD Quigley SMB RB30
2001 LC4 640
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1966 Impala SS ( for sale or trade. Need a jeep type people mover for the new house)
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