The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Delta flight crew transports evacuees from devastatio­n

Volunteers fly relief supplies to islands and ferry storm victims out.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

The passengers boarding the plane at Marsh Harbour in the Bahamas were shellshock­ed after surviving Hurricane Dorian, recalls the Delta Air Lines relief flight crew.

The adults wore “vacant expression­s,” said Capt. Carl Nordin, a chief line check pilot who normally works at the airline’s Atlanta headquarte­rs but volunteere­d to fly a plane stocked with supplies to the storm-stricken region and transport evacuees to Nassau.

“They were in shock” and were exhausted, said Christi Jackson, a flight attendant manager who worked the cabin. “The adults were, like, in a daze.”

Delta operated relief flights last week, transporti­ng 50,000 pounds of relief supplies and more than 360 evacuees.

“It’s one thing to read about this and see it on the news and read about evacuees,” said pilot Erica Jefcoat, who served as first officer. “It’s a whole other thing to stand right in front of somebody and they’ve got everything they own, and they’ve got their children with them.”

”They’re telling you about lost loved ones or people they don’t know about,” Jefcoat said. “Some of them didn’t even know where we were taking them and what’s going to happen when we get there.”

Some of the children were too young to understand the traumatic experience of living through the storm, “but the older ones, they did,” Jackson said.

After boarding the plane, the passengers asked for water and more air conditioni­ng, Jackson said. Crew members handed out water and snack boxes and turned the A/C on high.

For Nordin, the effort to make the relief effort happen started Friday night when he got an email from Delta’s senior vice president of flight operations, Jim Graham.

“We were very concerned about the condition of Marsh Harbour,” including the runway, security and the airport infrastruc­ture, Nordin said. Because of the state of the infrastruc­ture and limited resources, there were no airstairs or other equipment to offload passengers, so Delta had to fly down a plane with built-in stairs like the MD-88, which has tail cone airstairs that can extend out the rear of the plane.

Nordin was also concerned about security on the airfield, wondering, “Were there thousands of people, desperate people, waiting for a ride?”

But after seeing images on television of the destructio­n in the Bahamas from Dorian, he decided he had to go. “Those people were in despair,” Nordin said.

Delta has operated flights before to Marsh Harbour in the Abaco Islands. But after the hurricane, the airport closed to commercial flights because of infrastruc­ture damage.

Last Saturday, Jefcoat was working at Delta’s operation center at its headquarte­rs next to Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport when she e-mailed Nordin and asked whether he needed any help on the relief flights to Marsh Harbour. He suggested she serve as co-pilot. The first flight departed that evening.

Jefcoat said she “stormed through town and up to the Northside to pack,” calling her husband and nanny to make arrangemen­ts for her 3-yearold and 6-year-old. Her father and husband, both pilots, had some real concerns, asking her what she knew about airport security in the Bahamas. Not a whole lot, she replied.

But Jefcoat trusted that the advance work the airline was doing would ensure the mission’s success.

Jackson was at the hair salon last Saturday at 1 p.m. when she got a call from a Delta managing director about the relief flight leaving at 7 p.m.

Then she got a call at 2 p.m., notifying her she would need to sign in for the flight at 5 p.m.

“I just kind of had that adrenaline flowing,” said Jackson, who has volunteere­d for humanitari­an flights to Houston, St. Maarten and San Juan, Puerto Rico, after hurricanes in 2017, and to New York after Superstorm Sandy in 2012.

“I told the stylist, ‘Could you hurry up? I’m gonna need more hair spray,’” Jackson said.

When the stylist asked where Jackson was going, she said, “I’m going to the Bahamas. ... I know it’s going to be hot, and I know we’re going to be somewhere where there’s no air conditioni­ng. So I need for you to hook me up.”

Jackson, who has offered peer support to other flight attendants through a Delta program and is also an ordained minister, said she is accustomed to helping people going through trauma. She made sure some diapers and baby food in the supplies to be loaded into the cargo bin were instead brought into the cabin for evacuees traveling with babies.

Delta brought employees from security, customer service and other department­s to handle passengers on the ground, and the National Emergency Management Agency in the Bahamas designated evacuees to be transporte­d.

 ?? RAMON ESPINOSA / AP ?? Tereha Davis, 45, holds a plate of rice as she walks among the remains of her shattered belongings in the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian in McLean’s Town, Grand Bahama, Bahamas last week.
RAMON ESPINOSA / AP Tereha Davis, 45, holds a plate of rice as she walks among the remains of her shattered belongings in the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian in McLean’s Town, Grand Bahama, Bahamas last week.
 ?? DELTA AIR LINES ?? A Delta pilot greets passengers on a Bahamas relief flight. The airline’s volunteers flew into an uncertain situation immediatel­y after Hurricane Dorian devastated the islands to bring relief supplies in and to ferry evacuees out to Nassau.
DELTA AIR LINES A Delta pilot greets passengers on a Bahamas relief flight. The airline’s volunteers flew into an uncertain situation immediatel­y after Hurricane Dorian devastated the islands to bring relief supplies in and to ferry evacuees out to Nassau.

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