San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

VILLAGERS USE HEADLIGHTS TO AID AIRLIFT

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The plane circled overheard, the pilot searching in the darkness of a far-flung Alaskan village for a runway that didn’t seem to be there.

The runway lights at the stateowned airport in Igiugig, Alaska, — population 70 — had failed on Aug. 28, hampering efforts to airlift a local girl to the nearest hospital in Anchorage, some 280 miles away, officials said.

That’s when the villagers in the tight-knit tribal community sprang into action, driving their 4-by-4s, allterrain vehicles and cars to the rural airport, where they pointed their headlights at the runway to help the pilot of the Lifemed Alaska flight land, photograph­s showed.

Ida Nelson, the tribal clerk and newsletter editor for the Igiugig Village Council, said that at least 20 vehicles, including her Honda 4-by-4, lined the runway. Nelson said her neighbor made 32 phone calls in an effort to mobilize the villagers, who are members of a sovereign tribe of Alaska. Most of them responded, she said.

“Any time a plane flies over that late at night, you know something is wrong,” Nelson said.

Nelson, 36, said she was taking a steam bath at her sister’s house near the airport when she heard the sound of the Beechcraft King Air plane.

“We ran out of the steam bath and saw the lights of the bottom of the aircraft,” Nelson said.

But when Nelson and her sister looked toward the airport, she said, it was dark. There are few landmarks to guide pilots at night, said Nelson, noting that the village school has lights, but that’s about it.

There are no shopping centers or necklaces of streetligh­ts to guide pilots in the skies above Igiugig, which is in the southweste­rn part of Alaska. Villagers there maintain a subsistenc­e lifestyle and hunt animals such as moose, caribou and porcupine.

Nelson said she and her sister drove to the airport, where a local pilot had tried unsuccessf­ully to turn on the runway lights.

“I asked him, ‘Should I go to the end of the airport and try to light up the end of the runway?’ ” she said. “He said, ‘Yeah, go ahead and try.’ ”

A spokeswoma­n for the Alaska Department of Transporta­tion and Public Facilities, which owns the airport, said that the runway lights had been vandalized and run over by an all-terrain vehicle. She said that maintenanc­e workers inspected the damage and have begun planning repairs.

Lifemed Alaska commended the villagers in a Facebook story.

“What appears to be a blurry, dark photo is actually a view of what an amazing community can do with a lot of determinat­ion,” Lifemed Alaska said in the post.

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