They Left On A Logistics Mission And Ended Up Rescuing More
Than 100 Civilians
US Navy Lt. David Shand and Lt. Matt Udkow thought they'd done
the right thing. They left NAS Pensacola on a logistics mission --
provide much-needed supplies to military installations along the
hurricane-ravaged Gulf Coast. They ended up rescuing more than 100
civilians stranded by floods. Instead, the New York Times reports,
they were "chided" for deviating from their assigned mission.

"I felt it was a great day because we resupplied the people we
needed to and we rescued people, too," Lieutenant Udkow told the
Times. But the air operations commander at Pensacola Naval Air
Station "reminded us that the logistical mission needed to be our
area of focus."
Both were flying H-3 helos (file photo of type, above), often
used in rescue missions as well as in resupply tasks. If you've
seen any of the media coverage in the days just after Hurricane
Katrina slammed into the Louisiana and Mississippi coasts.
"Their orders were to go and deliver water and parts and to come
back," Commander Michael Holdener, NAS Pensacola's Air Ops Chief,
told the Times.
They did that, delivering both to Stennis Space Center in
Mississippi. But on the way back to base, they intercepted a Coast
Guard radio transmission that said helicopters were desperately
needed to help with rescues near the University of New Orleans.
"We're not technically a search-and-rescue unit, but we're
trained to do search and rescue," Lieutenant Shand, a 17-year Navy
veteran, told the New York Times.

Arriving in the fast-flooding New Orleans, Shand, Udkow and
their crews found few rescue operations underway. "It was
shocking," Udkow said. So they headed for storm victims waving
desperately from rooftops. They lowered their rescue baskets again
and again.
"I would be looking at a family of two on one roof and maybe a
family of six on another roof, and I would have to make a decision
who to rescue," he said. "It wasn't easy."
Back home at NAS Pensacola, the Navy was already in a bind. The
base only had two aircraft to fly logistics and resupply missions.
There simply weren't enough pilots to fly long-running SAR
missions.
"We all want to be the guys who rescue people," Commander
Holdener said. "But they were told we have other missions we have
to do right now and that is not the priority."
The situation doesn't sit well with other pilots and flight crew
members. Some have even stopped wearing the unit patch that says,
"So Others May Live."

The Navy now says there was no reprimand and both Shand and
Udkow have continued to fly.
"Since then, Lt. Shand and Lt. Udkow have flown eight missions
in New Orleans, saved 30 people and delivered 30,000 pounds of
supplies," NAS Pensacola spokesman Patrick Nichols told the
Pensacola News Journal. That's a big step up for Udkow. Immediately
after the incident with Commander Hodener, he was reassigned,
overseeing a kennel housing the pets of base personnel forced to
evacuate in the face of the storm.