"Its versatility is what made the hovercraft a game-changer for water rescues, Chief McElfresh said. “It can run over mud, dry land, the road, on water and swift water.”
Seymour Tribune
June 26, 2019
by Jordan Richart
The latest floodwater rescue tool a
fire department in central Jackson County has added to its arsenal of response
vehicles has drawn plenty of curiosity from the public.
“You almost have to wait until late at
night to go to the gas station,” Brownstown
Volunteer Fire Department Chief Travis McElfresh joked. “Everywhere you go, people like to ask questions about it and see it
up close.”
That
mysterious, bizarre-looking craft is the department’s new Neoteric Hovercraft it purchased June 15.
During a
recent discussion about the hovercraft outside the department, the vehicle drew
a few passersby who wanted photos or more information about it.
A
demonstration of the hovercraft on County Road 25E in Brownstown near
floodwaters from the East Fork White River also drew a small audience who were
eager to see it operate.
Brownstown
Assistant Fire Chief Mitch Noelker demonstrates the use of the department's new
hovercraft
in floodwaters off County Road 25E.
|
The
Neoteric Hovercraft is manufactured in Terre Haute and differs from boats and
other hovercrafts in that it can go in reverse.
Hovercraft
utilize one or more fans or propellers to create lift and thrust. Lift air is
captured in a flexible fabric skirt, causing the craft to hover above the
surface. Thrust air is directed backward to move the craft forward.
On June
15, McElfresh and Assistant Fire Chief Mitch Noelker received training on the
Wabash River and returned late that night. Three hours later, the hovercraft
was dispatched to its first rescue.
Since
then, the department has used the four-seated craft to conduct 11 rescues
involving 14 people, McElfresh said.
Those
numbers earned them recognition from Neoteric in a post on the company’s blog.
“In Neoteric’s more than half a century in
business, never has a fire department gone immediately from hovercraft flight
training to performing a series of successful high-risk floodwater rescues,”
the company wrote in its post.
The
department had been considering purchasing a water rescue craft in the last
year because of the number of water rescues in the area, McElfresh said.
Between Jan. 1 and June 18, Jackson County had 55 calls for water rescues with
nearly a third of them since June 1. There also was a high number reported
during a recent span when the county received 8.24 inches of rain in seven
days.
When a
group from the department attended the fire convention show in April, they
found the Neoteric, which was demonstrated for them on floodwaters afterward.
After
discussions with the fire board, which controls the department’s budget, the
department moved forward with the $40,000 purchase. McElfresh said the
department kept in mind what other resources were available throughout the
county, which is why they settled on a hovercraft.
“The sheriff’s department has a johnboat,
conservation has an airboat, so we decided to get a hovercraft,” he said. “All three of them can do different things.
The johnboat can go places the airboat can’t. This can go where it can’t, vice
versa. We didn’t want to double up on resources in the county.”
Its
versatility is what made the hovercraft a game-changer for water rescues,
McElfresh said. “It can run over mud, dry land, the road, on
water and swift water,” he said.
When
flying over land, there’s a 9-inch clearance. “If you come over a 9-inch log laying in a field, you just cruise over
it like it wasn’t even there,” McElfresh said.
The craft
also has the capability to go in reverse, which is not an option with an
airboat. It also can turn 180 and 360 degrees. “When you’re pulling up to a vehicle, it makes it pretty easy,”
McElfresh said.
During a
recent rescue, a man was walking through floodwaters. McElfresh said the man
was about 4 feet away from walking through swift-moving water. First responders
told the man to stay put, and McElfresh was able to work the craft to the side
until they could safely rescue him. “We were able to get right up against him and
pull him up,” he said.
The greatest benefit might be its role in assisting with rescues on ice. The craft will allow crews to make a rescue without putting weight on the ice. “You’re hovering on air and move on the ice without busting it up,” McElfresh said.
The Brownstown Fire Department’s new hovercraft is pictured outside the department. |
So far,
McElfresh and Noelker have received training to operate the hovercraft.
McElfresh said once they get more hours behind the bars and get more
comfortable, four others at the department will receive training.
The group
also joined Project H.E.R.O., which stands for Hovercraft Emergency Response
Operations, a nonprofit that serves during natural disasters. The department
will receive additional training through that organization.
“We’ll do joint training on the Wabash River,”
McElfresh said.
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