Engine 17 cuts through a white wall of snow and rain, and Capt. Jeremy Norton is pretty sure this is going to make for a strange shift. Since the mid-April blizzard the day before, weather in Minneapolis has gone from biting cold to sunny to whiteout squalls so dense he can hardly see the roads.
"It is weird and unsettling," Norton writes in his journal.
The fire crew pulls up to a house, where Norton and paramedics find a frail and elderly man who has fallen down. He says he hasn't been sick. But he is warm to the touch and his oxygen levels are low. The paramedics suspect coronavirus. Norton fits the patient with an oxygen mask and helps escort him to the ambulance, stopping every few feet so the man can catch his breath.
The call leaves Norton anxious. He and his crew were wearing protective gloves, goggles and masks, but since it came in as a fall, not an infection, they hadn't dressed in full protective suits. This reinforces Norton's concern that every call could end up being a COVID-19 case, no matter how they're dispatched. The crew returns to the station and begins the process of washing their hands and all their gear, down to their shoes, while trying to abide by social distancing.
"It is strange to keep our distance from one another, as the bonds of our job are what help us decompress and process the traumas we experience," Norton writes. "I remind the crews that nurses have been doing it for years in hospital settings: germs are real and are deadly. Deal with it."
Norton, 53, is a 20-year veteran of the fire department and a Minneapolis resident of 26 years. He serves as captain at Station 17, home of the Minneapolis firefighters responsible for medical and fire calls in the city's southern region between Lake Harriet and Lake Hiawatha, stretching north-south from the Powderhorn neighborhood to Tangletown.
At the request of the Star Tribune, Norton kept a log of Station 17's activity on April 13 and 14, omitting any data that would violate patient privacy. The document serves as a rare real-time glimpse into the world of a first responder on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic — one of those "essential workers" without the luxury of sheltering in place. Norton is in charge of not only helping slow the spread of the virus in the community, but also minimizing exposure to his crew. Just last week, the first firefighter in Minneapolis tested positive for the virus.
It's been almost a month since Minnesota's first COVID-19 death, and so far Minneapolis has been spared the devastation of hot spots like New York City, where medical personnel load dead bodies into refrigerated trucks, and where some firefighters say they're reminded of Sept. 11, 2001.