TX Firefighter Struck at Crash Scene: 'It's Been Very Difficult'
By Domingo Ramirez Jr.
Source Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Fort Worth firefighter Shonna Moorman had one thought going through her mind seconds after she stepped onto a highway at an accident scene on Dec. 31 — “Run.”
She wasn’t fast enough.
The 20-year veteran of the department was hit by a vehicle, and she became another one of the hundreds of first responders injured each year on highways in Texas and across the United States.
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“I heard the brakes lock up,” Moorman said Thursday afternoon at Fort Worth Station 11 in Justin. “I saw it over my shoulder.”
Moorman talked about the accident Thursday for the first time at a news conference at her home fire station.
The station is less than a mile from where the accident occurred on Texas 114 just south of the Texas Motor Speedway about three weeks ago.
Moorman survived after suffering serious injuries to her left leg. She spent a week in a local hospital.
“It’s been very difficult,” Moorman said.
But she plans to return to work as a firefighter.
Fire officials are reviewing the early morning accident. Moorman was walking around the front of her fire engine when she was hit by a passenger vehicle. The driver who hit Moorman stopped immediately.
Two fire trucks typically respond to major accidents in Fort Worth — one provides the protection for the crew working the scene. Moorman and the crew from Station 11 had arrived first and the second truck was just seconds away.
“She did everything possible to prevent what happened,” said fire department spokesman Mike Drivdahl.
Moorman said she has talked to several firefighters since the accident, and they have a concern with vehicles.
“It’s not fires that scare them as much anymore,” she said. “It’s highways.”
In the last 10 years, four Fort Worth firefighters have been hit and injured by vehicles while at the scene of a traffic accident in the city, according to fire officials.
“Even one first responder being hit on the road while providing service is too many,” said Fort Worth Fire Chief Jim Davis in a news release. “Motorists need to move over and slow down when emergency vehicles are responding or stopped while working an incident.”
Statistics show drivers have not slowed down. In 2018, an estimated 14,425 collisions were reported in the United States involving fire department vehicles responding to or returning from incidents, according to the National Fire Protection Association.
In this country, an estimated 58,520 firefighters were injured in 2018 in the line of duty, according to the NFPA. Of those, 4,150 were injured while responding to or returning from an incident. Another 22,950 were injured at non-fire emergency incidents or other on-duty activities.
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