QAS Insight Autumn 2022

Page 32

Toowoomba Airbase flags rich culture The walls of the Toowoomba Airbase are draped in history and culture and represent each of the staff members who have worked at the hangar, Madolyn Sushames writes.

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Flight Critical Care Paramedic Anthony Clark asks each new starter to the Queensland Ambulance Service or LifeFlight to bring a flag from the country they’re from to hang on his ‘flag wall’. “It’s a good conversation starter and when people come in, especially the international doctors, they know we’re going to embrace their culture and learn about where they’re from. Everyone loves it,” Anthony said. As a former Australian Defence Force solider, Anthony has always been passionate about history. “I thought we’ve got this whole concrete wall here let’s start doing a flag wall of all the people who have worked for QAS or LifeFlight,” Anthony said. Anthony has learnt, however, there is a particular way to display each flag after one of his friends who served in the army as a Regimental Sergeant Major pointed out to him. “He’s a very ceremonious person and is right up with the flag protocol and there is quite a significant protocol with hanging flags in order and where they sit,” he said. “He’s been keeping a keen eye on the flags from the road when he drives pass and has given me a few tips on how to hang them properly and which way they face.” Anthony said Commonwealth country flags hang on the left-hand side and the others on the right with the two outer flags being English and America. “A few of them look like they’re facing the wrong way but that’s how the country hangs it so as long as they’re facing the right direction and hanging the right way that’s ok,” he said.

Autumn 2022

It all started with an Australian flag given to one of the pilots from his brother who was a drone pilot in Afghanistan. “It sat in the nose compartment of his drone that flew many missions in Afghanistan supporting Australian troops, so there’s a bit of significance there,” Anthony said. “The cable on which the flags are hung is the original winch cable off our very first helicopter that we had in Toowoomba 14 years ago.” About 20 flags from all over the world now hang proudly in the Toowoomba hangar. “It just keeps growing and growing, I think we’re going to fill that whole wall,” Anthony said.

Background

■ A bout 20 flags from all over the world hang proudly at the LifeFlight hangar. In frame

■ F light Critical Care Paramedic Anthony Clark started the flag wall at the Toowoomba Airbase.


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Articles inside

Nambour hits a hundred

2min
page 49

FNQ farewells Lara and Ronald

4min
page 33

Toowoomba Airbase flags rich culture

3min
page 32

Abbey answers the call of new life

3min
page 31

From heart stopping to heart-warming: Paramedics reunite with cardiac arrest patient

2min
page 30

Child caller helps spread positive message

4min
page 29

EMD scales new heights for cause close to her heart

3min
page 28

Sarah makes May her special month

6min
pages 26-27

Welcome to our new HARU Doctors

6min
pages 24-25

QAS’ Man of Steel hangs up his cape

5min
pages 22-23

Taking the dirt change

7min
pages 20-21

Strong planning leads QAS through COVID-19 and weather extremes in early 2022

5min
pages 18-19

Influenza season and paramedic immunisers

2min
page 17

Mental Health Co-Responder evaluation project will guide better patient outcomes

3min
page 16

Gold Coast paramedic finds connection to country through rugby

7min
pages 14-15

QAS staff reflect on Ambulance Australia experience

9min
pages 10-12

QAS celebrates outstanding ASM recipients

4min
page 6

Child Protection - we all have a role to play

6min
pages 8-9

QAS Workforce Forums 2022: A tale of two cities

2min
page 5

HARU Report

3min
pages 38-39

OpCen Report

9min
pages 40-42
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