Worker rescued from rubble after construction accident in Kentucky
Send a link to a friend
[November 15, 2024]
By BRUCE SCHREINER and TIM EASLEY
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Firefighters in Kentucky's largest city rescued a
construction worker on a demolition team who fell into a void Thursday
and became trapped in rubble, requiring a tedious, hourslong operation
to dig him out.
The rescue was shown live on local Louisville television stations hours
after the worker fell into a hole and debris fell on top of him around
noon. Paramedics were on hand to place the worker onto a stretcher,
cover him with a blanket and transport him to an ambulance.
One rescue worker patted the worker on the back as he was being hoisted
out.
Louisville Fire Chief Brian O’Neill said the worker was conscious and
alert when he was rescued after being “completely buried” 10 to 12 feet
(3 to 3.7 meters) below ground. He said the worker hadn't been able to
move but was able to communicate in Spanish with multilingual members of
the team.
“He was in a lot of pain,” O'Neill said. "This is a pretty severe
accident.”
The worker was taken to the University of Louisville Hospital, where his
injuries were being assessed.
Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg called it an “incredibly difficult
trench rescue,” and said he had met with the victim’s mother to update
her on his condition. The family was waiting to see the man at the
hospital Thursday night.
A hospital spokesperson did not respond immediately to an email query
about the worker's condition.
The man had been part of a demolition team working at the site and fell
into what the fire chief described as a “void space.” Five other workers
were with him at the site of a former corrections building that is being
demolished to make way for a medical campus.
The rescue team — specialized in trench rescue and confined space rescue
— arrived within minutes, O’Neill said.
“He got very fortunate that he had a little bit of a void space around
him," O'Neill said. "So he was able to breathe.”
[to top of second column]
|
Construction workers and members of the Louisville Metro Fire
Department use a large vacuum to remove debris as they attempt to
rescue a worker trapped underground at a construction site in
Louisville, Ky., Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024. (AP Photo/Timothy D.
Easley)
The fire chief said the worker was buried and pinned in place by
gravel, dirt and large chunks of concrete, which required the rescue
team to dig him out by hand, clearing the area around the man’s arms
and chest so he could receive medical aid. He said rescue workers
also used a vacuum truck with a large pipe to suck up smaller
debris, and they used propane tanks to push hot air into the hole to
keep the worker warm.
“We are moving tons and tons of debris by hand, by buckets,” O’Neill
said, describing the process. “Imagine a person at the bottom of a
funnel. You have to shore up everything else that’s going to keep
cascading down to create a safe space and then continue to dig this
person out.”
Rescuers continued to work through Thursday evening after night
fell. Officials had a crane and ladders going into the hole, which
was several feet wide. The worker was freed around 8:30 p.m.
The fire chief called it a “very long, very tedious, very slow-going
process to do it safely, to make sure that you do not cause
additional injury to the individual.”
Once the firefighters got the worker out, it was a “tempered
celebration,” O'Neill said.
“This is what our firefighters do," he said. “This is why we took
this job. We want to help people. And it’s not like the movies.”
Earlier this week just a few miles away, a Louisville manufacturing
plant exploded, killing two workers and damaging dozens of nearby
homes. The cause of the explosion is not yet known.
___
Associated Press writer Anita Snow in Phoenix contributed reporting.
Schreiner reported from Shelbyville, Kentucky.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |