For 75 years, the — a solely volunteer organization — has served as the main response agency for mountain search and rescue in 鶹ӰԺ County. Beginning in 1947 with its first headquarters in the basement of the CU 鶹ӰԺ engineering center, RMRG has held close ties with the university for decades. There is an RMRG student volunteer group at CU that is one of the university’s longest-running student organizations. Many alumni are also volunteers.
“Being a part of RMRG means being a part of a long history of excellence in mountain search and rescue,” said Steve Dundorf (CivEngr’97; MS’01), an RMRG volunteer for almost 30 years. “It is about helping those in need and saving the lives of people in our outdoor community. And it is about working in the outdoor environment that we all love.”
Technical mountain search and rescue can include:
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Scree evacuations
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ԴǷɳDz
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DZٱ
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ATVs
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Avalanches
RMRG’s main priorities:
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Technical mountain search and rescue
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Outdoor safety education
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Disaster response
Dog rescues happen at least once a year
First meeting: Feb. 3, 1947 (celebrating 75 years this year)
Works with more than 40 other emergency response agencies around 鶹ӰԺ County
Everyone is a volunteer and there is no charge for rescues
RMRG funding sources: 18% grants, 30% donations, 52% government contributions
RMRG covers 450 square miles of 鶹ӰԺ County, where there are 10M+ visits to open spaces a year
200 search and rescue calls per year on average
15,000+ volunteer hours a year
8,100 search and rescue calls since its formation in 1947
Photos courtesy RMRG