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Injured paramedics credited with saving crash victim’s
life
By Jeanette Brown
Special to KP News
In a near deadly car versus ambulance collision in the
early morning hours of March 11, two EMT volunteers from
Key Peninsula’s Fire District 16 and a staff paramedic
were injured while transporting a Lakebay resident to a
hospital. The collision occurred at approximately 3:14
a.m. at the intersection of an infamous corner on State
Route 302 frequently referred to as “the corner of
death” by local residents and law enforcement officials
alike.

The cab of the
ambulance was totaled in the accident, and
fire district officials do not know if the
back part will be reused.
Photo courtesy Fire District 16 |
Although
injured themselves, members of the Key Peninsula
ambulance crew were able to get Lakebay resident
Christine Smith out of the vehicle that had struck them,
administer life-saving care and put her on a back board
before another ambulance got to the scene.
According
to FD-16 Division Chief Chuck West, “Emergency room
doctors at St. Joseph’s Hospital stated that it was very
fortunate for Smith that she received the emergency
life-saving care from the professionals already at the
scene at the time the accident occurred.”
Firefighters and paramedics from Kitsap, Mason and
Pierce counties responded to the scene, according to
FD-16. Smith, 53, was a passenger in a Chevy Tahoe
traveling southbound on 118th Avenue NW driven by her
husband, Robert Smith. According to Washington State
Patrol officials, he failed to obey a stop sign and the
SUV was struck on its passenger side by the Key
Peninsula Medic One ambulance, which was headed
eastbound on SR-302.
The
patient in the ambulance at the time of the collision, a
Lakebay man en route to an area hospital when the SUV
collided with the ambulance, received minor injuries. He
was later transported to St. Joseph’s Hospital by a Gig
Harbor ambulance. Robert Smith, 49, was transported to
Harrison Hospital in Bremerton with minor injuries, and
later taken to Pierce County Jail and booked on two
counts of vehicular assault, including one count for the
injury of his wife.
In a
press release, WSP reported, “According to witnesses of
the collision, Smith did not slow or stop at the stop
sign crossing directly into the path of the oncoming
ambulance.” Troopers at the scene believe “alcohol was a
contributing factor in this tragic and preventable
collision.” The highway was shut down for more than five
hours while authorities investigated the scene.
The
driver of the ambulance, EMT Dean Junell, had the lights
and sirens activated and spotted the approaching SUV
before the impact, thus enabling him to warn the crew in
back to brace for the accident. According to West,
paramedic Michael Riegle was just about ready to connect
his patient to the heart monitor when the impact
occurred. EMT Andrew Tilley, of Fox Island, stayed in
the ambulance with the original patient while Riegle and
Junell “dug through ambulance debris,” in order to find
the equipment to provide emergency care to the injured
couple.
West
said, “I am very proud of the ambulance crew and the way
they acted under extreme emergency conditions. The men
had to be reminded that they were also patients and
needed to be hospitalized.” They were transported to a
hospital with minor injuries and released.
Riegle
and Junell, both of Port Orchard, were back to work by
March 20; at press time Tilley was expected to return to
his volunteer post soon. Junell and Tilley are unpaid
resident volunteers, each working two days per month
while also holding other jobs. They are part of an
in-house training program for those interested in a
career with the fire department. West said the
department is looking for more resident volunteers.
As for
the fate of the ambulance, West said, “Insurance
investigators are still working on repair/replacement
estimates and the cab is completely totaled, but there
is a possibility of taking the back box off and reusing
that.” The cost is expected to be almost as expensive as
buying a new ambulance, and while it was necessary to
bring in another ambulance that night, it was the lack
of staff to drive and respond to emergencies that had
West worried, not the lack of fire equipment.
“Bringing
in another ambulance is not that unusual, but a more
immediate problem is shortage of trained firefighting
staff,” West said, noting that Reigle was the only
paramedic on shift that evening.
Next
month: A closer look at this dangerous stretch of State
Route 302, where lives have been lost.
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