North

Alaska villagers use vehicles to light runway for medevac carrying child

Residents of an Alaska village lined a remote runway with cars, trucks and all-terrain vehicles to provide enough light for a medical transport plane to evacuate a child.

Residents of Igiugig scrambled just before midnight to help save child's life

Villagers in Igiugig, Alaska, use vehicles to light the runway for a medevac, as seen at bottom right, on Friday. (Submitted by Sarah Ransom)

Residents of a remote Alaska village scrambled just before midnight Friday to help save the life of a child, jumping into their vehicles to light up a pitch-black runway as a medical transport plane circled overhead. 

People were running around in pyjamas to help out, said Ida Nelson, who lives near the runway in the southwest Alaska village of Igiugig.

She had just gotten out of a steam bath when she heard the sound of the plane and noticed that the runway lights weren't on. She took her all-terrain vehicle to the runway a few hundred yards from her home as a neighbour made 32 phone calls requesting help.

"That's pretty much almost every household in this village. Pretty much every cellphone here," Nelson said. 

The medevac pilot circled as Nelson and others on the ground co-ordinated via phone and radio, staggering cars, trucks and ATVs down the length of the runway and using their headlights to show the pilot where to land Friday night, Alaska's Energy Desk reported. 

What appears to be a blurry, dark photo is actually a view of what an amazing community can do with a lot of determination.- LifeMed Alaska

LifeMed Alaska had sent a King Air flight from Kodiak to the state-owned airport at the mouth of the Kvichak River on Iliamna Lake. The child was safely evacuated to Anchorage.

"Normally, if you push the button like 10 or 15 times the lights will just light up," Nelson said. "But they didn't and so the medevac plane flew over the village."

'An amazing community'

LifeMed Alaska posted a photo on social media showing a straight line of lights in the distance.

"What appears to be a blurry, dark photo is actually a view of what an amazing community can do with a lot of determination," the company wrote.

LifeMed Alaska had sent a King Air flight from Kodiak to the state-owned airport at the mouth of the Kvichak River on Iliamna Lake. The child was safely evacuated to Anchorage. (CBC News)

Department of Transportation spokesperson Sam Dapcevich said on Sunday that crews have been out to the airport multiple times this year repairing lights that had been run over during winter maintenance, and they were out there as recently as last week to fix a wiring problem. 

"They will be returning soon to repair the damaged lights and make sure the system is operational," he said in a text message.

"We're glad the community was able to safely guide the medevac flight in."