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Published: Monday, October 8, 2007

If a disaster hits, they'll be ready

Darrington drill helps rescuers learn to manage panic

  • Johanna Lentes, 16, a German foreign exchange student living in Darrington, is wrapped in a space blanket by Frankie Nations of Darrington during a flood drill staged on the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Reservation off Highway 530 in Darrington on Sunday afternoon.

    Suzanne Schmid / The Herald

    Johanna Lentes, 16, a German foreign exchange student living in Darrington, is wrapped in a space blanket by Frankie Nations of Darrington during a flood drill staged on the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Reservation off Highway 530 in Darrington on Sunday afternoon.

  • Harmony Harvey, 14, of Marysville, feigns distress as Community Emergency Response Team volunteers Jim Rudy and Cheri Fenstermaker hoist Harvey onto a stretcher during a flood drill on Sunday afternoon. The practice drill was staged in an abandoned home on the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Reservation.

    Harmony Harvey, 14, of Marysville, feigns distress as Community Emergency Response Team volunteers Jim Rudy and Cheri Fenstermaker hoist Harvey onto a stretcher during a flood drill on Sunday afternoon. The practice drill was staged in an abandoned home on the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Reservation.

  • Suzanne Schmid / The Herald
With a fake puncture wound, Dylan Estrem, 14, of Camano Island is carried to an ambulance during the flood drill.

    Suzanne Schmid / The Herald With a fake puncture wound, Dylan Estrem, 14, of Camano Island is carried to an ambulance during the flood drill.

DARRINGTON -- Johanna Lentes looked to be badly injured and was on orders to frustrate the rescuers working to pull her from a collapsed building.

"I was underneath a door and could only speak German the whole time," said Lentes, 16, a German exchange student at Darrington High School.

The teen was among more than a dozen people on Sunday pretending to be trapped and injured in a flood-damaged building as part of a disaster drill on the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Reservation.

It felt like Halloween with all of the fake blood and horror-movie-quality injuries, which were meant to test disaster volunteers' medical knowledge.

"I had broken glass sticking out of my skin, was fading in an out of consciousness and couldn't move my legs," said Harmony Harvey, 14, one of the mock injured.

Dylan Estrem, 14, of Camano Island didn't fare much better. He had a fake wooden spike in his gut.

In a T-shirt, he didn't have to pretend to be shivering on the cold and rainy Sunday afternoon in the mountain foothills.

Hundreds of people from 37 agencies were part of the drill, including Snohomish and Skagit county rescue workers, the Darrington Fire Department and Tulalip Tribes.

For practice, tribal officials evacuated some of the 88 people living on the reservation as part of the drill. A hovercraft helped carry flood victims across the river in a related drill nearby.

All of the practice helps eliminate the panic emergency volunteers might feel while trying to help during a disaster, said Lynda Harvey, the emergency management director for Tulalip Tribes.

About 30 people hauled boards and doors from the damaged building, freeing and carrying out injured people as they went.

"It really gets scary. It's quite an ordeal," said Frankie Nations, a Darrington city councilwoman learning skills in CERT -- Community Emergency Response Training.

Janice Mabee, Sauk-Suiattle Indian Tribe chairwoman, also was at the drill to complete the CERT course.

She said there's a slough running behind homes on the reservation that has tribal leaders worried. Before 1949, it was the main channel of the Sauk River.

It wouldn't take much for the river to jump back into the channel and chew through homes, leaders fear.

"We can't trust our river in back of us and have to be prepared," Mabee said. "We have to impress upon our people that the river does migrate."



Reporter Jeff Switzer: 425-339-3452 or jswitzer@heraldnet.com.


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