by Senior Airman Shawn Nickel
354th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
10/1/2013 - EIELSON AIR FORCE BASE, Alaska -- Every
Airman trains for emergencies and Self Aid and Buddy Care then proves
their skills during exercises, inspections and deployments. For three
Icemen, SABC and communication skills became a real matter of life or
death during a family trip May 26.
After seeing a boat capsize in the Upper Chena River, the aircraft
structural maintenance Airmen from the 354th Maintenance Group took
action to save the lives of three local citizens.
After having their campground flooded by the swelling river and moving
to higher ground, Staff Sgt. Travis McKee, Senior Airman Noe Puente and
Tech. Sgt. Zach Stewart found the group troubled by the raging water.
Jeremy McDonald, driver, along with brothers John and Billy Minerva and a
dog, Cutie, were forced into the water when the current of the flooding
river pushed their boat against a log, called a sweeper, and turned the
vessel upside down. McDonald, who was temporarily trapped under the
boat, wiggled free and reached the shore safely, yet was quickly chilled
by the icy water.
The Minerva brothers' situation was far worse.
"As soon as I hit the water my breath was taken away and it seemed like
thousands of pounds were crushing me because of the current," said John,
the older of the two brothers. "We were both trapped under a log jam
and there was no way I could move. I could see and it seemed like I
could hear everything, but I just couldn't move. I knew I was going to
die."
Almost four feet under the frigid water, John's luck turned. His
brother's flailing knocked them loose from the logs and they were pushed
even deeper. The rushing current swept them under the jam and into open
water.
"As soon as I could, I took a breath, but it was just water," he said.
"When we finally made it to the surface we could barely move let alone
swim and pull ourselves up. At this point we couldn't even fully breathe
because water was rushing over our heads."
McKee and Puente had kept close eye on the water and started running
down the shore to a position where they could grab the helpless victims.
John said he could hear them shouting directions and pointing out where
he was floating.
With little regard for their own safety, McKee and Puente crept along a
sweeper into the water and pulled the freezing brothers to safety. Cutie
was nowhere to be found.
"We would have certainly died if it wasn't for those Airmen," John said.
"Not only in the water, but maybe when we made it out from
hypothermia."
The three Airmen quickly went to work bandaging minor wounds from the
crash and treating symptoms of hypothermia and shock; all skills they
learned from Self Aid and Buddy Care training, McKee said.
"We have been forced to watch [Computer Based Trainings] our whole
careers and it seem like nothing but a chore. When you're asked to use
the training in an exercise, you fumble through it, but in real life all
the practice paid off," McKee said. "It was like second nature
communicating and being able to help."
After the group was sure no hypothermia was present, they searched for
the dog. After hours of searching miles downriver, Cutie was still
missing. The boat had completely sunk and was pushed downstream by the
rushing current. The group gave up and Stewart drove the three victims
home.
Four days later as the spring runoff subsided, Cutie was found under the boat safe and sound.
"There is no way I would be around to have a dog or do anything if it
wasn't for these guys," John said. "I would just like to thank them for
sacrificing their own safety to save us that day and for sacrificing
every day doing what they do."
Although John and others call them heroes, McKee, Puente and Stewart all have humble attitudes about the event.
"We were just happy to be there," McKee said. "It was just common sense
at the time. I would expect anyone to do the same no matter who they
are."
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