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Firefighter details treating Little

A Prince George firefighter said one of the two men killed in the Lakeland Mills explosion nearly three years ago had to be loaded into the back of a pickup truck and driven from the scene to an ambulance stationed on River Road.

A Prince George firefighter said one of the two men killed in the Lakeland Mills explosion nearly three years ago had to be loaded into the back of a pickup truck and driven from the scene to an ambulance stationed on River Road.

Testifying this week at the coroner's inquest into the April 23, 2012 blast, Peter Brbot said he found Alan Little outside the mill's northeast corner laying in the mud, exposed and in need of help. Other than a sock on one foot, Little had no clothes on and was so badly-burned he was unrecognizable, the inquest heard.

Using a spine board, Little was taken back to a triage station firefighters had set up at the scene where they waited for an ambulance.

But after waiting for what felt like an eternity, but was actually "seven, eight, nine minutes maybe," Brbot said firefighters concluded they should put Little in the back of then Prince George Fire Rescue chief John Lane's pickup truck and take him out onto River Road where an ambulance had been stationed.

Once there, Brbot said they had to wait for a second ambulance to show up before he could be taken away to University Hospital of Northern British Columbia.

Little was conscious but other than some moaning and saying "help me" a few times, he did not say much.

"He looked like he was in a lot of pain and we didn't want to question him too much," Brbot said.

In earlier testimony, ambulance paramedic Grant Jameson said he attended to Little as he was taken to hospital.

Although covered in severe burns, Jameson said Little was able to talk and said he was at a machine when there was an explosion and he was thrown. He was "surrounded by fire," the inquest heard, but "crawled and rolled" his way out of the mill.

As a matter of policy, Jameson said paramedics keep their distance from potentially dangerous scenes and remain at the "closest safe spot" until given the go-ahead to advance by dispatch. Brbot testified firefighters and ambulance do not communicate through a common radio channel but instead go through dispatch.

Jameson said there was some concern even about where paramedics had stationed themselves, at Lakeland's River Road entrance, because there was debris on the road.

Jameson said he took Little straight to the trauma unit at UNHBC before returning to Lakeland to pick up more patients.

Dr. Brian Hillhouse attended to Little once at the hospital. Other than on the soles of his feet, Hillhouse told the inquest that Little was covered in third and even fourth degree burns and suffered burns to his airways.

Hillhouse determined Little had been engulfed in flame and would not survive. He concentrated on easing his pain and giving him some comfort.