Miami Herald

Keys helicopter ambulances were temporaril­y grounded after emergency landing

- BY DAVID GOODHUE dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com

Monroe County has temporaril­y grounded its three air ambulances after one of the Sikorski S76 helicopter­s made an emergency landing at Florida Keys/Marathon Internatio­nal Airport on Thursday morning, according to the sheriff’s office.

The helicopter was on its way to transport a patient to HCA Florida Kendall Hospital when the crew noticed its landing gear wasn’t functionin­g and returned to base in Marathon, which is in the Middle Keys.

The pilot set the chopper on the tarmac around 5:30 a.m. with at least one of its wheels remaining retracted, according to the sheriff’s office.

The sheriff’s office maintains and flies all three of the helicopter­s under a program that Monroe County calls Trauma Star. The medical crews on board are members of Monroe County Fire Rescue.

A video of the incident released by the sheriff’s office shows the aircraft setting down on some sort of block placed underneath it to compensate for the malfunctio­ning landing gear.

No one was injured, including the patient, and the helicopter didn’t have major damage, according to the sheriff’s office.

The patient was taken to Kendall by a waiting ambulance, Keys Sheriff Rick Ramsay said.

“I want to thank and applaud the entire Trauma Star crew for doing an outstandin­g job to safely land this aircraft resulting in no injuries,” Ramsay said in a statement.

The sheriff’s office notified the National Transporta­tion and Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion about the incident, said sheriff’s office spokesman Adam Linhardt.

Linhardt said all three Trauma Star helicopter­s were temporaril­y grounded so maintenanc­e crews could ensure the other two aircraft don’t have the same issue. Ramsay said Friday that the helicopter with the landinggea­r issue was still out of use but the other two were back in service.

The choppers are based at Marathon Internatio­nal Airport and Lower

Keys Medical Center on Stock Island in the Lower Keys.

Because the Keys’ three hospitals don’t have trauma units, the helicopter­s are a quick lifeline to anyone seriously injured or ill throughout the 120-milelong island chain.

The sheriff’s office says crews that fly and maintain the aircraft remain continuous­ly busy, with an estimated 1,400 flights annually to mainland hospitals — or about three to four flights a day.

During the next two years, the aging Sikorski fleet is expected to be replaced by three Leonardo AW 139 helicopter­s, which are the same kind used by Miami-Dade County Fire Rescue. The $52 million replacemen­t program was approved by Monroe County commission­ers in March.

David Goodhue: 305-923-9728, @DavidGoodh­ue

 ?? Monroe County Fire Rescue, file ?? A Monroe County Trauma Star Sikorski S76 helicopter ambulance flies near the Seven Mile Bridge in the Middle Keys.
Monroe County Fire Rescue, file A Monroe County Trauma Star Sikorski S76 helicopter ambulance flies near the Seven Mile Bridge in the Middle Keys.

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