Class Information & Details
Course | Active Attack Integrated Response Course Indirect |
Dates | Tue Nov 26 - 26 (2024) |
Location | San Antonio ISD Police Department, 514 Quincy, San Antonio, TX, 78212 |
Hosting Agency | San Antonio ISD PD (TX) If you are a licensed Texas peace officer, and/or are seeking licensure or re-licensure and would like to attend an ALERRT course within Texas, you are allowed to attend and earn TCOLE credit. However, it is the sole responsibility of the attendee to ensure that,A) the host agency is a TCOLE approved contract training provider** and will report the training hours for all course attendees, or, B) your own agency will report the course hours for you. If you are not commissioned with an agency at the time of the training, you must ensure the host agency is a TCOLE training provider. ALERRT does not report in-direct deliveries. **List of TCOLE Training Providers here: TCOLE Training Providers |
Point of Contact | Joe Garza (jgarza3@saisd.net / 2105733762) |
Description | Active Attack Integrated Response Course (AAIR) Recommended Equipment: Participants may wear their agency issued or approved uniform to class each session. This course is a hands-on training course and participants are encouraged to wear appropriate clothing for conducting practical exercises and scenarios. Fire and EMS personnel do not need to bring bunker gear. Department or agency issued or personal weapons, both primary and secondary, are not required for this course. Officers are responsible for properly securing their weapons during the training course and should follow agency policy. A lockable storage container will be available on-site to secure handguns during the practical exercise portion of the course. Handguns must remain in a secure holster to be stored in the provided lockable container. Ammunition, weapon magazines, batons, electronic control devices, knives, and pepper spray are not allowed in the training area at any time during the course. Duty radios for use in train-ups and scenarios is strongly encouraged. This allows each individual to work with their equipment they’ll be using in an actual incident as well as it tests interoperability of the system once multiple agencies are on scene.. |