
Just 10 minutes before a gas
explosion leveled a house in Floral Park, Queens on April 24,
firefighters from Ladder 116 were called to another major
emergency, a man trapped under a train at Northern Boulevard and
36th Street in Long Island City.
“It’s not something I have ever
seen before, and I’ve been on the job 20 years,” said Lt.
William Kelly from Ladder 116. “It really was incredible. It was
emotional, draining and there was a lot of adrenaline involved.
”
Firefighters received the call
for a person under a train at 4:41 p.m. And when they arrived at
the station, people were frantically waving firefighters to the
R train platform.
The victim was under the first
car of the train, and Lt. Kelly said when he shined his
flashlight in the space between the platform and the train, he
could see the man and a lot of blood.
Lt. Kelly said he talked to
members of the MTA and asked the company chauffeur to call
dispatch about turning off power on the tracks.
He then assigned one firefighter
to watch the train’s conductor and the controls to ensure the
train would never move. Then, before they knew the track power
was off, he and Firefighters Rich LaRocca and Terence Drew
jumped onto the tracks.
“It was incredible to see my guys
jump down there like that, without hesitation,” said Lt. Kelly.
“It really was kind of moving.”
They crawled on their hands and
knees about three quarters of the way under the first car and
located the person, who had received major trauma, including two
broken legs and severe lacerations to the head and neck. Yet the
firefighters said they were happy to find the victim was still
alive and semi-conscious.
“We knew time was a critical
factor in saving this guys life,” Lt. Kelly said.
They put him in a cervical collar
and on a backboard. They then dragged him the length of the
subway car to the front of the train where they were met by
members of FDNY EMS - including EMS Lt. James Furlong, Rescue
Paramedics Kimberley Marshall and Mario Ramirez, and EMTs Pedro
Acosta and Dennis Rehberger.
The EMS members then packaged the
victim and transported him to Bellevue Hospital.
“They were very efficient,” said
Lt. Furlong. “It was a hot day but they got the job done.”
Lt. Kelly credited their
extensive training for why everything worked so well: “It sounds
cliché, but since we train for many different situations like
this, at a certain point you just know what you’re supposed to
do without thinking.”
Yet at there was no time for the
members to discuss the rescue afterwards, they were immediately
sent to the scene of the gas explosion in Floral Park. |