By Tim McGrath
Photo by Juan Serrano. |
As the near-record storm approached, Chicago rented some 50 machines from an outlet in Wisconsin. When the storm hit, dropping 12 inches in as many hours then adding eight more for good measure, the rigs were gassed up and ready to go in firehouses across the city.
Rosado said that a firefighter was assigned to each snowmobile. When an emergency call came in, a snowmobile would be dispatched with an ambulance and either a truck or an engine company. Staying on the main thoroughfares, which had been largely cleared by plows, the rigs would get as close as possible to the caller’s location. From there, the snowmobiles led the way down snow-clogged residential streets.
“We were glad to have them,” said Rosado. “Conditions on the side streets were usually so bad that only something on skis could make it through.”
A team of firefighters and paramedics waded through the snow on foot, meeting the snowmobile operator at the front of the residence. Some patients were able to ride out on the back of the two-seaters, but those who couldn’t were strapped into a Stokes basket and towed out to a waiting ambulance.
But the snowmobiles also helped save minutes when those minutes counted. “They transported several heart attack victims and mothers giving birth,” Rosado said. “And they helped rescue motorists stranded on Lake Shore Drive.”
Besides being used for EMS, the snowmobiles were available for firefighting operations. Luckily, few fires were reported during the storm itself, and, of those that were, none required a snowmobile intervention. However, had there been a need, the vehicles could have brought speed and efficiency to what otherwise might have been a long, hard slog.
“They could have been used to lead out hose, “ Rosado pointed out. “And they could have hauled tools and other equipment to the fire building.”
Tim McGrath retired in January after 14 years with the Chicago Fire Department. Before joining the department, he worked in the laser industry as a technical writer. He has a degree in philosophy from Tulane University.