by Master Sgt. Mark Olsen
108th Wing
11/9/2012 - BRICK, N.J. -- New
Jersey Air National Guard Staff Sgt. Carl Hilpl is standing with the
rest of the electric crew in the parking lot of the Ocean County Medical
Center in Brick, N.J.
The temperature has fallen to 33 degrees and the rain is turning to
snow. Nor'easter Athena will soon be dumping snow, rain, high winds and
tidal surges on an area already hard hit by Hurricane Sandy.
It's day 10 of the New Jersey National Guard's mobilization for Hurricane Sandy.
Hilpl along with Tech. Sgt. Nate Worthy and Staff Sgts. Robert Jentsch
and Pete Tomos, all aircraft electricians from the 108th Wing, New
Jersey Air National Guard, have been called out to fix a generator at
the hospital.
Normally, these Airmen work on the electrical systems of a KC-135R Stratotanker air refueling aircraft.
Yet, when the state of emergency came, they worked just as well fixing
electrical systems in shelters, schools hospitals- wherever their skills
were needed.
This is the nature of the National Guard.
When they arrive, the team of citizen-Airmen find out that emergency
personnel called them to take care of light pole are afraid it will fall
on the surrounding tents during the upcoming Nor'easter.
Since Hilpl and his team have come on duty, they have been hooking up
generators and making sure they were compatible with existing electrical
systems.
At the Long Branch Middle School shelter, their work kept the lights on.
Before arriving at the hospital, Hilpl was able to get the gas-fired
generator at Veterans Memorial Middle School in Brick working.
But it isn't just about generators. At one point, Hilpl went out to
check on the power at the home of an elderly couple. The husband was
suffering from leukemia and the wife has cancer. Hilpl discovered that
the wife was running out of life-giving oxygen.
For the next several days, every 12 hours, Hilpl took new oxygen tanks to their home.
Not part of his training as an aircraft electrician, but certainly a duty as National Guardsman.
Back at the hospital a cutting torch is brought in. Hilpl and team have
removed the cover at the base of the light pole and he begins to cut the
bolts off.
After they finish, Hilpl, Worthy, Jentsch and Tomos will climb into
their up-armored high mobility multipurpose wheeled vehicle and move on
to the next generator.
Keeping New Jerseyians from going into the dark.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
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