[USCG Auxliary PS Officer List] People of the Year: The U.S. Coast Guard

Joe Engel joe at jre.com
Wed Dec 28 19:39:54 EST 2005


Had to share this with you all.

Joe Engel
DVC-PC

People of the Year: U.S. Coast Guard
Risking Their Lives to Save Thousands After Katrina
Dec. 28, 2005 - - Many Americans were unaware of who they were or what
they did until this year. But when Hurricane Katrina hit and the waters
began to rise, U.S. Coast Guard members moved in by air and by sea,
risking their lives to save thousands of others.

"When we flew into the storm the winds were still pretty high," said
Petty Officer Joel Sayers, a Coast Guard rescue swimmer. "You're always
expecting to see one or two people here or there that you could actually
hoist and move out of harm's way, but it was true devastation. The water
was already up over the roofs of some houses, and it was still rising.
There were people everywhere, holding on to trees, people on top of
their homes, people trying to climb on top of their homes."

The Coast Guard rescue swimmers were some of the first on the scene in
Louisiana and Mississippi, rescuing victims before the storm had even
passed.

Sayers says during that first 24 hours, the rescue teams were running on
adrenaline.

"As many as you can get as fast as you could pick them up and as safely
as you could do it," he said.


'Always Ready'
More than 5,000 Coast Guard personnel conducted rescue operations, using
62 aircraft and 131 cutters and small boats as they lived up to the
motto Semper Paratus, or Always Ready.

"I think the Coast Guard's efforts are always tremendous," Sayers said.
"I think in this particular situation, I think they went way beyond what
anybody expected any agency to do."

It was a mission for which they had never trained. Normally, the Coast
Guard saves an average of 5,500 people a year. Within two weeks of
Katrina, it had rescued or evacuated more than 33,000 people under the
most difficult circumstances imaginable.

"I found that it was one of the hardest situations and some of the
hardest rescues ever," said Sayers. "You constantly think about
everything around you -- the power lines, the trees, the broken gas
lines, the amount of things floating in the water, the roofs separating.
There were so many different hazards out there it was hard to focus on
one thing. You constantly had to keep your head on a swivel."

And those images will be with them forever.

"You look at the crew members that are around you, your fellow Coasties,
and you wonder if they're OK," Sayers said. "It's a lot to take in. It's
a lot to carry with you. I will always remember Katrina. It will always
be a part of my heart and will always be a part of my soul."

ABC News' Bob Woodruff filed this report for "World News Tonight."

Copyright (c) 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures

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