RESCUE ON THE HIGH RISE BRIDGE

With his truck dangling 70 feet above a roiling river and a storm whipping 80-kph winds, a trapped driver’s only hope is a team of trained emergency rescuers—who are stuck in traffic

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With his truck dangling 70 feet above a roiling river and a storm whipping 80-kph winds, a trapped driver’s only hope is a team of trained emergency rescuers—who are stuck in traffic

The winds this April morning were giving Wayne Boone’smassive 2007 Freightliner tractor trailer a good lashing. A driver for Butler Paper Recycling in Suffolk, Virginia, Boonesteered the empty 18-wheeler up a stretch of Interstate 64 in Chesapeake toward Virginia Beach, about 40 kms away, where he would pick up his first load of the day.

The 53-year-old driver pulled into the eastbound left lane of the G.A.Treakle Memorial Bridge, known to locals simply as the I-64 High Rise, a four-lane drawbridge that traverses the southern branch of the Elizabeth River. On the span, the storm let loose its full force, finding no obstacles in its path but vehicles. Rain hammeredBoone’s windshield. Winds grew fiercer. Boone slowed, letting cars pass. It would be good to get to the other side.

At the bridge’s crest, 70 feet above the rushing estuary, the concrete road gives way to steel decking. Even in perfect weather, it’s easy to lose traction on the grids. Boone’s front wheels met the slick steel just as a powerful gust blasted the driver’s side.

To Boone, it felt as if the wind lifted his truck clear off the surface. He could swear that he was floating for a second before being dumped into the right lane. He had no time to consider how such a thing could be possible. His cab barreled into the guardrail on the far right edge, mangling the metal barrier that protected his truck from pitching into the water below. He6struggled to regain control. His empty trailer, meanwhile, jackknifed to the left, skidding sideways at an angle to the cab.

Fighting both truck and weather, the steering wheel unresponsive, Boone was swept along about 200 feet, unable to get traction. Then a second gust, raging more violently than the first, blew through the open mesh of the bridge’s steel grid. It slammed into the driver’s side of the cab and simultaneously shoved it upwards from below, lifting the cab, with Booneinsi...

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