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Rubber Baby Perishes In Attempted Rescue By Sweaty
Journalist
Tyler Morning Telegraph
Jacque Hilburn
April 26, 2002
Rubber Baby Perishes In Attempted Rescue By Sweaty Journalist Some things
are harder than they look.
Such was the case this week after I bugged the Tyler Fire Department to
let me preview one of their newest projects - a smokehouse.
The training center allows firefighters to polish their skills in a
realistic "home" setting, complete with artificial smoke, furniture and
pretend victims.
Overcome with curiosity, I pestered Chief Paul White for a closer look.
"C'mon, chief," I urged. "Let me take a run through the tower. It will be
fun." Boy, did he deliver.
I arrived at the two-story fire-training center Monday where fire
officials provided me with pint-sized bunker gear and boots.
Next came a hood, hat, mask, assorted doo-dads and an air-pack.
Forty-plus pounds of gear later, I was ready ... sort of.
"Somebody catch her, she's leaning backward," said District Chief Terry
Rozell, pushing my 5-1 frame back into an upright position. "Lean forward."
I did. Somewhat balanced, I clumped toward the entrance. "It's a little
warm," I said cheerfully, feeling beads of sweat erupt across my nose. "What
do you guys do when it's 110 degrees outside?" "Suffer," said firefighter
Brent Hail. "A lot."
And that's when the exercise became interesting. "Take a deep breath,"
instructed training Capt. Les Schminkey, pushing my face mask into place.
"This is your air."
Air? Eyes wide, I took a breath. So far, so good. Almost like scuba
diving, I thought. "Now," Schminkey said, handing me a large flashlight.
"There's a baby inside and you have to find him and rescue him. Mama is out
here screaming for you to do something and you don't have much time. Good
luck."
And with that, he opened the door. Smoke billowed out, revealing nothing
but darkness and a blanket of white fog. "Oh, and don't forget your tool,"
he said, handing over a 25-pound metal pry bar. "What's this for?" I asked,
gazing into the smoky darkness.
The tool is useful if you get lost and need to chop a hole through a wall
to escape, the captain explained. My confidence suddenly faded.
In the interest of fair play, officials sent firefighter Terry Hawkins
inside to trail along behind in case things went bad.
Fighting fear, claustrophobia and heat, I stepped inside. "It's best to
crawl," Hawkins said, dropping to his knees. "Go along the walls." I
couldn't see the walls.
Heck, I couldn't see him or anything past my facemask. The flashlight was
of little use, as it would not penetrate the darkness or thick wall of
production smoke.
And somewhere inside, was a baby. (Actually, it was a rubber CPR baby,
but you get the point.) Huffing and puffing, I started to search. Behind
furniture, under tables, anywhere a frightened little one would go in a real
fire. Inch by inch, room by room, nothing.
We moved toward the staircase to search the second story. Halfway through
the upstairs area, the unthinkable happened.
"What's that noise?" I called to Hawkins as a noise, similar to a lawn
mower sounded. "You're running out of air," he said. "You can continue to
search a few minutes longer, or you can turn back. It's your decision, but
the air's almost gone and you've got to find the way back out."
Frustrated, I just stood there, staring through my mask, which was now
foggy from my incessant huffing. Where was that kid? This was fair?
That's when I realized how easy it is for rescuers to become victims
themselves. "Let's go," I said, my voice filled with disappointment. "I've
done all I can." But where exactly, was out?
Concentrate, concentrate, I told myself, where was that blasted exit?
Fueled by adrenaline and a growing sense of fear over the air, I felt our
way down the hall, back down the stairs, through the living room and to the
exit, fortunately without taking a wrong turn.
Call it blind luck. But there was no victory in our return. I was
empty-handed and the rubber baby was still inside.
"You're out of air?" Schminkey asked when we emerged into the sunlight.
"You should have about 17 more minutes left on that tank. You must have been
breathing hard." That was an understatement.
Hence the importance of physical conditioning. Hawkins, who is also a
member of the TFD Combat Challenge Team, was less than halfway through his
air supply when we emerged. And so it was that the sweaty, humbled
journalist got a tiny taste of what real firefighters endure ... sort of.
Ironically, the experience was as much a mental challenge as a physical
one. After the smoke cleared, we went inside to retrieve the baby. It was
about two arm lengths away from where I stopped searching.
Bummer. As a consolation prize, the chief promised to let me take a trip
through another one of their new projects - the burn building. But next
time, he said, they'll add a little fire and a 250-pound charged hose line.
I can hardly wait.
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