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Ingenuity, patience key for Chicago firefighters in blizzard rescues

Contingency plan to use snowmobiles, hatched by the department several days before the storm hit, proved crucial

By Kerry Lester
Chicago Daily Herald

CHICAGO — There were times, Round Lake Fire Lt. Dave White said, when he could barely see his hand in front of his face.

So the going was especially slow as he and five battalion members searched stranded cars for people who needed help. They used snowmobiles outfitted with sleds to get the drivers from the roadside to nearby medical treatment centers, two at a time.

“We got a lot of calls from diabetics, people stressing out, being trapped in their cars,” White said. “Some we got to, others it took hours.”

In all, the department used six snowmobiles from 7 p.m. Tuesday to 4 a.m. Wednesday to rescue more than 70 people in Round Lake and Grayslake.

Ingenuity and patience were in high demand Tuesday and Wednesday as the record-breaking storm barreled through the Midwest, bringing about 20 inches of snow to suburbs from Antioch to Wheaton. Rescues occurred across the region as emergency crews figured out how to help stranded drivers and people in medical distress, no matter what it took.

“Ambulances don’t have four-wheel drive,” White said, noting that fire department vehicles from both villages got stuck at times in the heavy snow that was falling at rates of inches an hour.

The contingency plan to use snowmobiles, hatched by the department several days before the storm hit, proved crucial as snowfall became heavier and heavier, White said.

Firefighters were able to reach a Grayslake man who was having serious breathing complications, nearly a half-hour before the ambulance that had been called arrived.

It meant a ride on a snowmobile for the rescued, though.

“A lot of people weren’t dressed for the weather,” White said, “but we told them either stay in your car with no heat, or take the 5- to 10-minute ride.”

Five firefighters brought their own snowmobiles, and another was given to the department on loan from Nielsen’s Enterprises in Lake Villa.

Becky Schultz was on her way home to McHenry around 4:30 p.m. Tuesday when she got stuck in a long line of stranded cars on Route 60 near Mundelein. A physical therapist at Advocate Condell Medical Center, Schultz spent the next seven hours in her Jeep, trapped with countless other motorists as snow piled up around them.

“I’m a woman of faith, so I spent the most time praying,” Schultz said. “I figured someone would come and rescue us.”

She was right. About 11:30 p.m., two Round Lake firefighters appeared on a snowmobile and started shuttling people to safety.

One of the firefighters used Schultz’s Jeep to take the woman and a few other motorists to the nearby Fremont Township headquarters. Schultz admitted she isn’t a great driver and let one of the firefighters drive, once the Jeep was filled with people.

“I’m very messy, so we had to throw all this (stuff) in the back,” she said.

Another driver helped take a woman in labor to the hospital.

Trapped for 12 hours
Don’t ask Craig Wartinbee what would have happened if the White Riders Snowmobile Club hadn’t come to his rescue. Wartinbee, a physical education teacher for special education students within Elgin Area School District U-46, was trapped for 12 hours in a ditch on Route 72 between French and Walker roads in Hampshire.

Until the weather breaks, he and about a dozen others are staying at First United Methodist Church in Hampshire, which has become a warming shelter.

Part of Wartinbee’s job requires him to travel to multiple district schools daily, so at 5:40 p.m. on Tuesday, he was leaving Sycamore Trails Elementary School in Bartlett. It was nearly two hours before he got stuck in Hampshire.

Wartinbee would have left school sooner, but the weather prevented a grandmother from picking up her grandchild on time. So he stayed until she got there.

The Genoa resident had slowed his Hyundai Elantra down to 30 mph on the road because visibility was zero.

All of a sudden, everything stopped.

And then, he said, he was “sitting there where all you see is snow and it’s white out front. We had nowhere to go because we couldn’t move.”

As the snow piled up, Wartinbee spent the next 12 hours sipping a soda, turning his car on at times to stay warm and talking to his wife, Judy, on the phone.

The snowmobile arrived at around 8 a.m.; snowmobilers spent hours searching for stranded motorists.

The drivers took Wartinbee and 15 others to a gas station, the only business in town that was open, to warm up.

Later, the snowmobilers escorted the stranded drivers to the church, where they sipped coffee, ate soup from the food pantry, talked about their experiences and slept wherever they could find room.

Wartinbee is thankful to the driver; he thinks his name is Dan, but he isn’t sure.

“Would I be alive? I don’t know,” Wartinbee said. “Without those snowmobilers, who knows.”

Copyright 2011 Paddock Publications, Inc.

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