An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | March 16, 2023

176th Wing Guardian Angels Parachute to Pilot Station for Medevac

By Maj. Chelsea Aspelund, 176th Wing Public Affairs

JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska - During a complex medevac involving three 176th Wing Guardian Angel teams, two HC-130J Combat King II aircraft and one HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter, a combat rescue officer and a pararescueman parachuted into Pilot Station to reach a patient in critical condition.

Near midnight on March 7, the Alaska Rescue Coordination Center received a call for medical evacuation assistance from the Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corporation in Bethel.

The attending physician said the community health aide at Pilot Station, about 90 miles northwest of Bethel, needed an immediate medevac for a trauma patient suffering from a severe neck injury.

“The only option for transportation to higher care from Pilot Station this time of year is by aircraft, and LifeMed was on weather hold due to high winds and freezing rain along the route of flight,” said Master Sgt. Katelyn Biermann, senior controller at the Alaska Rescue Coordination Center.

The AKRCC coordinated with the 176th Operations Group search and rescue duty officer to request assets from the 176th Wing. 

Aircrew and 212th Rescue Squadron Guardian Angel teams were contacted while aircraft maintenance personnel prepared the 211th Rescue Squadron HC-130J and 210th Rescue Squadron HH-60G.

Upon arrival, the Guardian Angel teams inspected their parachutes and selected the right medical kits for the mission. 

“Our support teams are a cornerstone to these missions,” said Capt. Miles Brodsky, lead combat rescue officer for the mission. “Their ability to pack parachutes capable of low-altitude opening and to make sure we have the right medical equipment for the unique components of each mission is truly what saves lives.”

As the patient’s condition became more critical, the attending physician at Bethel provided medical guidance to the community health aides and relayed updates to the Guardian Angel teams.  

The weather was projected to be a challenge en route and landing at Pilot Station, so the aircrew and the Guardian Angel teams planned multiple options.

Pilot Station is a small airfield, unable to support the landing weight of an HC-130J, so the aircrew informed YKHC that if the HH-60G arrived first, aircrew would land at the airfield, but if the HC-130J arrived first, the GA team would have to parachute onto the airfield.

A few hours after the call from YKHC, aircrew identified a safe weather window, and 176th Wing assets were airborne and en route with GA teams on the HC-130J and the HH-60G.

Due to poor weather, the HH-60G landed in a field to wait for better weather and daylight.

“The HC-130J expedited flight time by refueling the HH-60G and providing weather and terrain navigation for both aircraft as they traveled through changing weather and challenging mountain passes,” Biermann said. “Unfortunately, weather became too severe for the HH-60G to refuel a second time, so the crew diverted to Aniak, where they refueled on the ground and waited for the weather to break.”

The HC-130J aircrew continued to Pilot Station.

Overhead, Brodsky coordinated clearance and prepared his team to parachute in with their medical kits strapped to their bodies. Master Sgt. Aaron Parcha, lead pararescueman and jumpmaster for the mission, verified wind speed, direction and landing zone trajectory with the combat systems officer on board.

Good Samaritans on the ground at Pilot Station turned the runway lights and waited with a vehicle for rapid transport to the medical clinic, where the GA team joined the community health aides.

“We immediately administered the first unit of blood, but the reality is, the health aides and the village community had already come together to keep the patient alive,” Brodsky said. “With larger hospitals miles or even hours away, health aides are an invaluable asset to rural Alaska.”

With personnel safely on the ground and word of a weather break for the HH-60G at Aniak, in addition to a second HC-130J en route from JBER to Bethel with a third GA team and a relief crew for the HH-60G on board, the HC-130J aircrew navigated their return route to JBER.

Nearly 12 hours after departing JBER, the medical team stabilized and prepared the patient for transport. The HH-60G aircrew navigated a break in the weather at Aniak and flew safely to Pilot Station.

The GA team on board the HH-60G received the patient and administered an additional unit of blood during transport to Bethel, where the patient was loaded on the second HC-130J for rapid transport to Anchorage.

On board the second HC-130J, Master Sgt. Anthony Fletes, the 212th RQS independent duty medical technician, and a third GA team took the lead for airborne patient care.

“The incredible thing about our IDMT flying out with King [HC-130J] is that he provided a fresh perspective and a new set of eyes to our patient care,” Brodsky said. “At that point, we were exhausted after nearly 14 hours of ground and airborne care.”

En route to JBER, the HC-130J refueled the HH-60G while the medical team continued patient care and coordinated with the medical team in Anchorage. Once on the ground, the patient was transported to higher medical care by LifeMed Alaska ambulance.

“This mission is a testament to the hard work of the medical professionals across the state of Alaska and to everyone involved from the 176th Wing,” Brodsky said. “Our maintenance and mission support teams keep us alive every time we pull a parachute, connect a hoist, or operate an aircraft”. 

For this mission, the AKRCC, 210th RQS, 211th RQS and 212th RQS were credited with one save.
 

 

 

Related Articles
Soldiers of Weapons Squad, 1st and 2nd Platoon, Avalanche Company, 1st Battalion, 297th Infantry Regiment, prepare to emplace a support-by-fire position March 21, 2026, during infantry squad drills at the Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson Infantry Platoon Battle Course. The squad is armed with M-240L 7.62mm machine guns that are five pounds lighter than the older M-240G model. Photo by Maj. David Bedard.
Alaska Guard’s Avalanche Company Hones Lethality
By Maj. David Bedard, | March 26, 2026
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska – Soldiers from the Alaska Army National Guard’s Avalanche Company, 1st Battalion, 297th Infantry Regiment, honed their lethality and live-fire skills March 20-22 during the unit’s...

U.S. Air National Guard Master Sgt. Anthony Lesle, 168th Logistics Readiness Squadron, 168th Transportation Flight, discusses vehicle maintenance statuses at the 168th Wing, ensuring fleet readiness in support of operations and winter conditions. Photo by Senior Master Sgt. Julie Avey.
Alaska Air National Guard Member Helps Save a Life
By Senior Master Sgt. Julie Avey, | March 18, 2026
FAIRBANKS, Alaska – What began as a father-daughter evening at an Armed Services YMCA Father-Daughter Gala quickly turned into a life-saving moment when an Alaska Air National Guard Airman used his training to assist an...

U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Daniel Pau, an information technology specialist assigned to the 1st Battalion, 297th Infantry Regiment, Alaska Army National Guard, operates a high-frequency radio while participating in exercise Arctic Connect at the Alaska National Guard’s Joint Operations Center on Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, March 3, 2026. Arctic Connect is high-frequency radio communications exercise conducted across Alaska, designed to validate select Alaska Organized Militia units’ ability to communicate with the Alaska National Guard’s Joint Operations Center and with each other. Photo by Alejandro Peña.
Exercise Arctic Connect Validates Communication Across Alaska
By Dana Rosso, | March 6, 2026
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska – In a state where communities are separated by vast terrain, and severe weather can isolate regions without warning, resilient communications are essential. More than 30 radio...