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Brewer Fire Dept
Hovercraft put to use saving girl
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
ELLSWORTH, Maine — A teenage girl who "needed some fresh air" ran
across the thin ice of Graham Lake on Monday morning to a small island
just offshore. After she was located by a game warden, both were rescued
by a crew in a hovercraft.
A hovercraft from Brewer was called into service for the incident and
towed on a trailer to the scene approximately 20 miles away by rescue
workers.
"She was cold," Game Warden Phil Richter, 48, said after being
plucked from the island by the hovercraft crew. "She wasn’t clothed to
be outside, for sure, just jeans and sneakers."
And her legs and feet were wet, "because she had broken through part
of the ice on the way over" to the island, which is located a couple
hundred yards offshore, Richter said.
The 14-year-old girl, whose name was not released, is enrolled in the
KidsPeace program, which is a "national children’s crisis charity
dedicated to giving hope, help and healing to children facing crisis,"
according to a press release from the agency.
She left her classroom in a building near the lake just before 9 a.m.
saying she needed some air. Her teacher "followed her outside to make
sure she was all right, but she ran down to [the] frozen shore of Graham
Lake and began running across the ice toward a nearby island," according
to the KidsPeace press release.
The teacher was unable to follow due to the lake’s thin ice. Within
10 minutes of calling for help, Richter arrived. He is a diver for the
Maine Game Wardens and understands the dangers of traveling across
waterways that are slightly frozen, he said. Even so, he donned a life
jacket and headed across the ice to search for the girl.
"It was really bad ice," he said. "It wasn’t good. Probably at the
thickest, it was probably a couple of inches. That’s why we didn’t come
back across on foot."
He said he moved gingerly while crossing the ice, noting that when he
heard it cracking, "you always get a shiver up the spine."
Richter, in his 18th year as a game warden, found the teen sitting on
a rock on the island. To keep her warm, Richter wrapped his jacket
around the girl and handed over his hat. The two discussed sports,
school, family and friends while awaiting rescue.
The Bon Ton IV, a 19-foot, 3-inch hovercraft purchased for the Bangor
region in April 2006 through a $59,000 grant from the U.S. Department of
Homeland Security, was called into service for the rescue. The game
wardens own two air boats and a hovercraft, but the Bon Ton IV, docked
in Brewer, was closer and the Brewer Fire Department offered their
services, Richter said.
The Hoverguard 1000 is shared between the fire departments of Bangor
and Brewer and is available for use by area communities.
Monday’s incident is the first time the hovercraft has been used for
a rescue, Brewer Assistant Fire Chief Chris Dore said.
"Last year, we got a call that something was stuck in the [Penobscot]
river," he said. "This is its first official use to rescue a person."
Lt. Robbie Wildes piloted the craft, and firefighters Scott Stewart
and Tony Cobb assisted.
Scott Conners, executive director for KidsPeace Graham Lake campus,
could not say enough about the emergency crews that arrived to assist.
"The response by the Maine Warden Service, the fire departments, and
others on staff was exemplary and we thank them with all our hearts," he
said. "In this part of Maine, we all know how dangerous the ice can be
at this time of year and we and the girl owe a debt of gratitude to the
swift and brave rescuers. In particular, warden Richter’s actions were
nothing short of heroic. All the responders were amazing."
Richter said he’s not a hero.
"That’s what game wardens do," he said.
A copyright story from the Bangor
Daily News, Tuesday, December 11, 2007. |