Guest guest Posted March 30, 2001 Report Share Posted March 30, 2001 By McCord Sun Staff Originally published March 28, 2001 State police Superintendent B. sharply reprimanded yesterday the bureau chief who authorized the use of a MedEvac helicopter Monday to fly a state senator to his burning home in Garrett County. The decision by Lt. Col. W. Czorapinski, chief of the state police support service bureau, which oversees its aviation division, was " inappropriate, " said. " I applaud his effort to help someone in their time of need, but I took him to the woodshed on this, " said. " There are other ways to help. " said the senator's use of the helicopter did not affect emergency medical transportation. Czorapinski said he thought authorizing the flight was " the right thing to do, " adding, " In retrospect, it might not have been, but I made the decision, and I thought it was right. " Sen. J. Hafer, a Republican who has represented Garrett and Allegany counties since 1991, was in polis about 4 p.m. Monday when he learned that a 2 1/2 -story farmhouse that has been in his family for generations was " engulfed in flames, " Czorapinski said. Beth Pirolozzi, Hafer's district administrator, said she asked a trooper on the State House security detail for help to get the senator home, and the trooper apparently called Czorapinski. " A call was made to my office, and after listening to the circumstances, I authorized the flight for him, " Czorapinski said. " He's in polis, serving the citizens of land, and his house is on fire. How often does that happen? " Hafer and his wife, Lorene, who had been in polis with him, arrived at Cumberland Airport about 6:30 p.m. Fire officials said the blaze started in a wall of a second-floor office and caused about $400,000 in damage to the house and its contents, which included family heirlooms and Mrs. Hafer's paintings. Pirolozzi said firefighters salvaged furniture and some of Mrs. Hafer's landscape paintings from the first floor, but everything on the second floor was destroyed. Hafer remained in Garrett County yesterday, and it was unclear when he would return to polis. He could not be reached. http://www.sunspot.net/news/local/bal-md.fire28mar28.story Use of MedEvac draws state police reprimand Bureau chief OK'd flying senator to burning home land State Police have 12 Dauphine helicopters at eight bases from Salisbury to Cumberland. Ordinarily, they are used to rush accident victims to hospitals as well as for search-and-rescue missions and law enforcement. Rarely are they used as personnel transports, said. " These are precious resources, and we recognize that, " he said. The one-hour round trip to Cumberland probably cost about $600 in fuel, Czorapinski estimated. Pirolozzi said Hafer asked her yesterday, after the question was raised on a Frostburg radio station, to check on the cost of the flight, but they had not decided whether he would pay for it. " He's suffered a tremendous loss, and it's sad that the only thing anybody cares about is the flight, " she said. Copyright © 2001, The Baltimore Sun ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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