Aviation Medical Evacuation Missions
Any Time – Any Where
Mission Report
Operation Teacup Note: Chuck Fazio Flew Multiple Missions
here are some his other photos He did not take a photo of the
subject of this email:
Vanilla Johnson on Arrival in Dallas Love Field Patricia Ellington on Arrival in Wilmington NC
From:
CHUCKFAZ@aol.comDate sent:
Tue, 13 Sep 2005 11:02:41 EDTSubject:
(no subject)To:
fred@teacup.cjb.netFriends,
My name is Chuck Fazio of Alexandria and you’re getting this email for one
of a couple of reasons: You either attended or rsvp’d to an event at my home
in Mt. Vernon, you’ve at one time sent me an email to my AOL account or I was
cc’d on an email you got from someone else. This is a blast email so I
sincerely apologize in advance if you find it to be inappropriate but if you read
on, I think you’ll see the cause is great.
Here’s why I’m writing. As you might know, I am a pilot and this past
tuesday, I flew a 10 hour medical mercy flight bringing back to DC from Baton
rouge to be reunited with her family, a 61 year old paraplegic woman named Lois
who barely survived the hurricane.
I'd like to tell you the story of that trip and at the end, make a special
appeal to you.
I took off around 7 Tuesday from my airport just south of the Wilson Bridge
and flew 4.5 hours non-stop to Baton Rouge landing at a corporate terminal
that was packed with a host of rescue pilots, a bunch of hurricane evacuees and
brian Williams of NBC.
After flying for almost five hours at 16000 feet, I was a bit fuzzy and the action
in that small terminal all seemed to blend together in a surreal kind of way.
As I was walking up to the desk to register and ask for fuel, I heard my
first name Chuck being called out twice by one of the women behind the
counter on the phone.
I said YESand she looked at me and said Yeager? Cool, I thought in the haze,
she saw the landing I made next to the MD80 on the parallel runway.
Not quite it turns out. THE Chuck Yeager was on an inbound flight and she
was arranging transportation.
I need some water, I thought.
In the mass confusion of that terminal called an FBO, I looked for my Lois
but she was nowhere to be found so I found an empty room to get some quiet
time while I tried to track her down.
Phone service was still sporadic so the best I could do after about ten tries was to
leave a message for the graduate student who had been volunteering at the shelter
where Lois lived for the past 5 days. Lived’, I came to find, was a wholly inappropriate
term to use to describe the hell and misery this woman endured.
I went back to the desk to find a fuel bill of over $410! And that was for
only one way!
By now I got a call back from the grad student Marcio (Editor Note: Marcio is from Brazil)
who told me Lois was on her way. Sure enough, shortly thereafter a ambulance with lights
flashing, came though the gate, drove out on the ramp and up to my plane.
I immediately hopped into the back of the ambulance to introduce myself to the poor
woman on the gurney. My god she looked like she had been through hell. With
tears in her eyes she said, Mr. Fazio, you were sent by god to me.Well ma’am,
i replied,’’god and I haven’t exactly been on speaking terms for many
years but don’t worry, in about 5 hours, you’ll be home to your family.
All she kept saying was, you saved, my life. That coupled with the I was
sent by god line shook m greatly. Oh sure, I’ve been told often that perhaps
the devil sent me but the god thing was something new.
The other thing that struck me was just how in the hell were we going to get
this woman laying flat on a stretcher into the back of my airplane!
Failure was not an option however. I still don’t know how we did it –
perhaps it was just another of the many miracles
Lois had over the past week, but after 20 minutes of effort, two
eMT’s and I were able to get this woman into the back of my Bonanza, the
inside of which is about the size of a small car. Gracious from the beginning to
the end, Lois kept saying she was fine although I knew she was in a great deal
of pain.
I called up the traffic controllers on the radio and was assigned a
lifeguard’ call sign which air traffic control uses to identify medical evacuation
flights.
For the next 5 hours, as I flew the almost 900 miles back to DC, I
was Lifeguard 727Victor Charlie nstead of the normal Bonanza 727Victor
charlie.
All air traffic controllers would now know that I had a very special
person on board Lois and I waited for a C130 to takeoff and then my new
friend and I were wheels up into the wild blue yonder. And blue it was as
the flight conditions were near perfect.
On the intercom, all Lois could talk about was the miracle
she was in the middle of and the beauty of the country beneath us. Our route
of flight took us south of Jackson, Miss., right over Birmingham, Al., a
little south of Chattanooga, over Ashville, NC, Roanoke, Charlottesville and right
over the District.
Lois, despite being in severe pain and having just been through what can
only be described as hell on earth, told me a harrowing tale that leads me to
believe they’re gonna find thousands of dead old people in attics soon because I
‘m sure Lois’ story was not uncommon.
Lois, her 83y/o aunt, a male adult next door neighbor and his 15y/o son were
advised to NOT evacuate their house because they had more provisions in
there than they did at the Superdome.
Knowing Lois was sick, the men left their house and huddled together with the
elderly women in the aunt’s one story house. Had they not, there’s no question
that Lois and her aunt would be dead.
At 4:30am, they noticed water seeping into their house but at that point,
they weren’t worried. 45 minutes later however, there were 4 feet of water and
an hour after that, Lois was floating on her air mattress with her nose on
the ceiling.
The fact Lois had an air mattress instead of a regular one is the only reason
she floated.
That’s miracle 1.
The 15 y/o, now in the attic, was with great panic, tearing through the
ceiling dry wall in a desperate struggle to get to Lois. Somehow they were able
to cut enough ceiling away to pull Lois into the attic for miracle 2 but that’s
a short lived one as water is rushing in so fast that at this point they
realized that if they didn’t get out of the attic right away, they would all
drown.
Somehow, (somehow’ is used a lot in this story because there is other way
to tell you how they did the impossible ) they were able to cut a hole in
the roof just big enough to get the 15yo out for miracle number 3.
He was able to flag down a boat that just happened to have a chain saw in it
and an hour and a half later, Lois, for miracle number 4, is on the roof and
then in the boat. The only problem now is she’s on the way to the
superdome.
I am so riveted by the story I’m hearing that I don’t hear air traffic
control’s call telling me to switch radio frequencies.
Lois goes on to tell me that her stay in the hell that is the Superdome is
less than 24 hours before miracle number 5 happens and despite the thousands
at the Superdome trying to get out, she’s evacuated to a hospital.
That’s the good news. The bad news is she’s being evacuated to a hospital
in New Orleans that’s about to be flooded.
A day late after she gets to that hospital, miracle number 6 happens and
unlike the hundreds of people who get stuck in NO hospitals with dozens dying,
she gets evacuated again, this time to the Pete Maravich Center (the P-Mac) on
the campus of LSU in Baton Rouge.
Lois then spends the next five days flat on her back in a military cot
with hundreds of other medical evacuees in what some describe as the largest field
hospital ever set up in the United States.
Lois spends most of her time talking and getting to know the nice woman
next to her. Sadly, her friend dies at 8:30 Tuesday morning because they gave
her too much insulin the night before.
I feel bad because had I gotten up at three am like I had planned, I would
have been down there in enough time to get Lois out before she had to spend
an agonizing two hours lying next to the stiffening corpse of her friend.
Lois finally gets the word that her nightmare is almost over, corpse aside,
as miracle number 7as she calls me is waiting for her at the airport to take
her home.
The whole trip, she kept saying that god is our co-pilot. Great, I though at
one point, because after 8 of ten hours in the plane, I’m freaken beat and
could use the help flying the plane. My headset feels like a vice and my
temporary crown is throbbing so much that I’m cursing my dentist and everyone he
loves.
Then I feel like a whining wuss as Lois reminds me by her gentle voice
what real suffering is about. The strange thing is although it hasn’t worked
properly for months, my autopilot worked flawlessly on this trip taking a
huge workload off me.
I told that to Lois who said, told you god was your co-pilot, baby.
The woman had been in hell for a week yet she didn’t lose her sense of humor.
4 and a half hours later, we were in the local airspace and Washington
center, the air traffic controllers that cover airspace as far south as the
carolinas switches me over to Potomac Approach which controls the airspace near DC.
They advised me that I would be routed around to the east of Washington in
order to avoid the restricted airspace. As if! After spending close to five
hours in the plane, Lois needed to get on the ground so I replied in no
uncertain terms that I had a woman in the back in pain who has been holed up in an
evacuation center for the past week and I’d really like to go direct.
A couple of seconds later I was told Lifeguard 727Victor Charlie, fly direct to
dCA, stay clear of the downtown prohibited areas and then on to College park
airport. Cool. That saved at least 20 minutes.
So, 5 hours after we took off, we were touching down into a beautiful
sunset. You’re home, darling, I said to that wonderful woman as I slowed the
plane down.
The airport called the local EMT’s, who after much work, got Lois out of my
plane and into their ambulance where she lay alone. I climbed into the back
to say goodbye to her and after showing such incredible strength all day, she
was just overcome with emotion. Tears were streaming down her face.
˜You saved my life, you saved my life, you saved my life god sent you, god
sent you over and over again.
I squeeze her hand and said goodbye. She looked up at me now, and too tired
to make a sound, mouths the words, I love you.
After 18 hours, it’s more than I can handle.
*****
I wish I could make these trips every day until every last person is out of
that hell but I can’t because quite honestly, this trip cost over $800 in
fuel alone. I just can’t afford it to do it anymore unless I get some help so
that’s why I’m writing to you now.
Could you spare a few bucks to help out so
we can immediately evacuate more people like Lois?
If you have a Paypal account, you can send money to
_chucklesebay@aol.com_(
mailto:chucklesebay@aol.com)Or you can send a check to me @ 600 N. Henry St
alexandria 22314 or you can call 703 894-9000 and tell Chris you want to
help Chuck by donating with a credit card.
The money isn’t tax deductible but I hope that’s not what matters to you.
Rather than being put into some big budget, your contribution will be spent
on gas that will be used by me and other local pilots who are trying to take
human beings out of inhumane conditions. I feel bad for asking but I’d feel
worse for not.
I appreciate very much you taking the time to read this note and I again
apologize if it was inappropriate to send it to you.
Peace,
Chuck Fazio
chuckfaz@aol.com
703 801-0700
If you know anyone else who might be able to help, would you please forward
this email to them? If you have any questions, please call me.