兔子先生

Trending Topics

Mo. construction worker rescued from sewer

Kansas City firefighters entered the sewer and found the worker face down in six to eight inches of water

KansasCityMissouriFireDepartment.jpg

A Kansas City, Mo. Fire Department ambulance.

Kansas City Fire Department/Facebook

By Andrea Klick
The Kansas City Star

KANSAS CITY, Mo. 鈥 A man is hospitalized in critical condition after he was found unconscious in a Kansas City sewer Monday morning.

Fire crews responded just before 8 a.m. to the 9200 block of Old Santa Fe Road, where they found an unconscious man lying face down in about 6 to 8 inches of water, according to Michael Hopkins, a spokesman for the .

Firefighters entered the sewer drain and put a respirator on the man, who was evaluated and didn鈥檛 have a pulse. Crews secured a rope around the man, removed him from the sewer and began CPR.

He was transported to a hospital and is in critical condition, but alive and breathing on his own.

The man is an employee of a company that was installing new sewer drains in the area, Hopkins said. Fire officials didn鈥檛 have further information on the man鈥檚 employer.

After the man was removed from the sewer, a hazmat team member evaluated the air. While they found no significant toxic substances, oxygen levels in the air were low.

Atmospheric oxygen levels measured at 11%, compared to a normal value of 21%. Levels below 19% are considered dangerous, Hopkins said.

The fire department is investigating the incident.

漏2024 The Kansas City Star.
Visit .
Distributed by

Trending
Minneapolis Police say the shooter opened fire through church windows toward the children sitting in the pews during school Mass before dying at the scene
Hennepin EMS official said the police鈥檚 swift, accurate tally of victims let medics move the wounded quickly to three hospitals
Monarez was fired less than a month after refusing to back 鈥渦nscientific, reckless directives,鈥 as four other senior CDC leaders resigned in protest
Metro Atlanta Ambulance Service now carries whole blood on ALS units across Bartow, Cobb and Paulding counties