MINNEAPOLIS — Gov. Tim Walz and public safety officials pleaded Wednesday for Minnesotans to follow coronavirus safety guidelines to protect their local police, fire and ambulance services, which have been hit hard by staff shortages amid the surge in cases.
Jay Wood, a firefighter from Plato, a town of about 300 people around 45 miles west of Minneapolis, said his 20-person all-volunteer department had to shut down last month because most members had tested positive for the virus or been exposed. One had to be hospitalized. And he said departments large and small across Minnesota face similar challenges.
"Just like we preach about fire safety, one little spark can cause a fire. And that's exactly what happened to us," Wood said at the governor's briefing. "COVID-19 sparked an outbreak at the Plato Fire Department. Before we knew it, over three-quarters of our fire department had been affected in one way or another from the virus."
So Fire Chief Jamie Schlechter was forced to take his entire department out of service. They had to rely on partners from other communities to protect about 500 households spread over 40 square miles (103.60 square kilometers), Wood said. Those departments are well-trained, and there was no disruption in service, Wood said, but people who call 911 want a fire truck to arrive quickly.
Ross Chavez, a Woodbury paramedic, told reporters that rural communities have fewer places to turn for help than metropolitan cities.
"While we do have these mutual aid agreements with our neighboring communities for when your local ambulance may not be available, it does take time to get a mutual aid ambulance to your community for your emergency," Chavez said. "... And in critical illness or injury it can be the difference between a good outcome or a bad outcome, or even life and death."
Fortunately, Wood said, the Plato Fire Department is back and the last two quarantined members will return Thursday.
"The biggest thing the public can do to help the fire service, and all public safety, is to follow the guidelines that the governor and the Department of Health have set out," Wood said, echoing pleas from Walz, Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington and other officials. "Follow those guidelines with wearing a mask, social distancing, limit our gatherings. It will help keep all of us safe."