The Tribune Democrat, Johnstown, PA

Local News

January 25, 2009

Rescued firefighter describes ordeal

Lying on his back inside a burning building, Ethan Kabler couldn’t see and could barely breathe.

And he was not sure he would ever see his family again.

“There was a point where, honestly, I didn’t think I was going to make it,” he recalled Sunday night.

Well before dawn Sunday morning, Kabler, a 17-year veteran of the volunteer-fire service, had raced to join his colleagues from Richland Township Fire Department at

1801 Bedford St.

That’s where Carmen’s Wholesale Tires was burning out of control.

A few hours into a battle that involved 22 local departments, Kabler and three others were on the structure’s roof trying to execute a “trench cut” – a maneuver that, they hoped, would save some of the building.

But Kabler accidentally stepped in a hole and fell more than 10 feet, landing on a pile of tires.

Because he fell on his back, his breathing apparatus malfunctioned. A firefighter on the roof tried to help by tossing down his own air pack.

But Kabler lost the mask, leaving him with little oxygen and few options.

“It was pitch-black, there was smoke everywhere,” he said.

“I was coughing, throwing up.”

He switched on a small light, but that provided only a few inches of visibility. And Kabler, knowing that his would-be rescuers could pinpoint his exact location, did not want to move.

“I would try to scream, but I was trying to preserve my air, because I didn’t know how much I had,” he said.

Kabler added that a voice from above was a lifeline of sorts.

“If it wasn’t for a firefighter being there on the roof and communicating with me, I would have lost hope,” he said.

It just so happens that Kabler coordinates his department’s rapid-intervention team, which trains for the type of situation he was in.

Remembering that training, he tried to stay calm.

“It seemed like an hour and a half,” Kabler said. “It was actually probably 10 to 15 minutes where I had no air.”

Help arrived when firefighters punched through a nearby garage door.

“When I saw them, that was the best moment,” Kabler said.

The firefighter was rushed to Memorial Medical Center.

He had no injuries from his fall but was suffering from carbon-monoxide poisoning.

By midmorning, Kabler was released from the hospital and returned to the fire scene to check in with his colleagues. By early afternoon, the 36-year-old was home with his wife and four children.

Kabler said he owes his life to his department’s rapid-intervention training and to the rescue efforts of his fellow firefighters.

“I told them, if it wasn’t for them, I wouldn’t be here right now,” he said.

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Rescued firefighter describes ordeal
by BY MIKE FAHER , , Sun Jan 25, 2009, 11:23 PM EST
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Poll

Which of the region’s big Labor Day weekend events are you planning to attend?

Cambria City Ethnic Festival in Johnstown.
Log House Arts Festival in Westmont.
Bill Dively Memorial Labor Day Bluegrass Festival in Berlin.
Cambria County Fair in Ebensburg.
Fall Harvest Gospel Music Festival in Hooversville.
Forest Hills Labor Day Festival in St. Michael.
Cruisin' the Flood City car show in Johnstown.
All of them.
As many as I can.
None of them.
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