History
Michael
Dutchak, the oldest of four children was born on February 21st,
1921 to Paul and Rose Dutchak on a farm south of Blaine Lake.
Young Michael Dutchak showed the spirit of a true business man
at a very young age. At 12, Michael was travelling around the
Blaine Lake area with a horse and buggy selling calendars and
fish and buying beer bottles and horse hair. When not out trying
to earn an earnest dollar, Michael was playing goalie in ice
hockey or back-catcher in hardball.
Michael attended a barbering school in Saskatoon and set up shop
in Blaine Lake at the age of 17 in 1938. He began to make his
mark on the world starting with charging 25 cents for a shave
and a haircut. At the age of 21, Michael was enlisted in the
army during the Second World War. He went first to Dundurn and
was then transferred to Port Alberney, British Columbia. Michael
eventually landed in Esquimalt and stayed for 4 ½ years working
in the barbering trade.
It was
the big band era and dances like the jitterbug and swing were at
the height of their popularity. Michael wasted no time in
learning the popular dances – it was a good way to meet women.
While on leave back home, Michael attended a dance in Parkside.
A young lady caught his eye. And boy, could she dance. So the
whirlwind romance began. Michael returned to Esquilmalt and sent
his new flame, Ida Anderson, a train ticket. She came out to
Esquilmalt and they were married on August 2, 1943 in Nanaimo,
British Columbia. The couple moved back to Blaine Lake in 1946
after Michael was discharged from the army. Michael bought the
CNR café from his father in 1947. Michael sold appliances out of
the CNR café while Ida worked as cook and waitress.
While
in the army, Michael along with the other recruits was taught
basic first aid. Around Blaine Lake, he was known as having some
medical knowledge and he was often called upon to treat and
transport the sick and injured to the nearest hospital. As
Michael says, “A little training can go a long way.”
Over
the next 10 years, Michael and Ida ran the CNR café, and
transported the residents of Blaine Lake and area when needed.
The children also started arriving with Barry, Wayne, Barbara,
Gail and David. The CNR café was eventually sold in 1957 and the
full time transport of patients started with a black station
wagon which Michael installed a siren and a “cherry”.
The
farthest trip that Michael ever did was from St. Paul’s Hospital
in Saskatoon to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota in 1959.
The patient’s name was John Salen. They stayed for 2 weeks and
transported the patient back home. Total payment for the trip =
$450.00. This paid for lodging and meals but did not include the
price of gas. This Rochester trip broke in the first brand new
“ambulance”.

Michael was also one of the founding directors of the
SRA-Saskatchewan Road Ambulance in 1959. It was created as a
non-profit organization to answer the need for a unified body to
represent the ambulance profession in Saskatchewan. The
Association was established to provide guidance, support and a
common voice on behalf of all ambulance services within
Saskatchewan. In later years, the name changed to SAA-Saskatchewan
Ambulance Association and then in 2000, to SEMSA or the
Saskatchewan Emergency Medical Services Association. Today it
represents 83 out of 109 services in Saskatchewan.
News
of the new ambulance service spread by word of mouth. Sometimes
you got paid and sometimes you didn’t. People paid you with
anything they had to give, and often times they
had nothing to give. Responding to a call, any call, became of
utmost importance not only for financial means but for the
establishment of the service. This meant that the phones, when
they arrived in Blaine Lake, had to be manned all the time. Ida,
as well as children Barbara, Gail, and Dave as they got older,
worked dispatched 24-7. There was no time for family vacations
and many a family supper was disrupted by the phone ringing with
yet another call. Recreational activities and after school
pursuits were second to the dispatching for the company.
In
order for Blaine Lake Ambulance to survive, it needed a place
to house the ambulances and medical equipment. Michael
approached the Industrial Development Bank in hopes of securing
a loan for a measly $25000.00. The bank did not think that this
was quite possible but IDB took a chance and lent him the money.
The present ambulance base was completed in 1971 in a
construction time frame of 6 weeks. The bank couldn’t quite
believe that either. The base consists of a two storey white
concrete building, capable of housing 4 units in the lower
portion. Living quarters occupy the top level and a radio and TV
repair and a barber shop occupied the bottom level as well as
the ambulance office. Michael also fulfilled and provided of
number of other services in the Blaine Lake area too numerous to
mention. Anything and everything to be done in order to pay the
bills and keep Blaine Lake Ambulance afloat. As Michael says,
“When you don’t know any better, you don’t miss anything. When
you need the money, you go when you can for however long you
can.”
In
1973, tragedy struck the family. Ida had suffered a debilitating
stroke and died on October 25th. The family not only
lost a wife and mother, but Michael had lost a business partner
– someone who wholeheartedly believed in him and his dream. Ida
was Michael’s first partner, not just in marriage, but also in
the ambulance. She is sadly missed and greatly loved. For such
is life, it has a funny way of continuing on regardless of
circumstances or losses. Keeping the dream alive was now solely
left up to Michael with the help of his children.

By the
early 70’s, other communities were interested in securing an
ambulance service. By this time, Wayne had already moved back to
Blaine Lake and had been working with his father for a year. In
1974 with Wayne by his side, Michael established Spiritwood
Ambulance. Wayne left Spiritwood Ambulance in the capable hands
of George Beaulac which was later owned and operated by
Michael’s daughter and son-in-law, Gail and Garry St. Onge.
Wayne went on to Prince Albert to establish Parkland Ambulance
in the fall of 1974. He was later joined by his older brother
Barry. Inroads were made into Saskatoon by providing a unit from
Blaine Lake to do stand-bys at the race track and by 1976, MD in
Saskatoon was in its infant stages and becoming quite a going
concern. Along the way NCAA, or the North Central Ambulance
Association was born. It is still the largest privately run
ambulance service in Canada – owned and operated by Michael
Dutchak and family.
Advancements in EMS have occurred in leaps and bounds over the
last 40 years. For example, the EMT course was not taught in a
formal education institution until the mid 80’s when SIAST
offered the first certificate program in Saskatchewan due to
industry pressure. The first ever EMT course in Saskatchewan
graduated 24 students in June of 1974. It was run by the
National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians based in
Ohio.

With
the passing of the Ambulance Act in 1980, ambulance services
within Saskatchewan were finally legitimized and regulated. The
creation of the government ASU or the Ambulance Services Unit
guaranteed that standards would be maintained through monitoring
and the issuing of protocols regarding the scope of practice for
all EMS practitioners.
The
lack of funding for all ambulance services was brought to the
forefront of the government’s agenda when a great number of
ambulances converged on Albert Street in Regina and proceeded to
the steps of the legislature. This prompted the commissioning of
the Birkbeck Report, which made it apparent that adequate
funding, other than that provided by the RAMROD program, would
be required for a quality EMS system to exist in Saskatchewan.
By the mid 1980’s, the government subsidies were initiated
through Saskatchewan Health to ease the financial burden placed
on ambulance services, not just by the Ambulance Act, but just
by the virtue of the business itself and the type of equipment
needed for the EMT level of practice. Insurance companies such
as Blue Cross GMS, DVA and INAC providing coverage for ambulance
costs also lightened the financial load on the private and
publicly owned operators. Life for an EMS operator was finally
getting easier. These events paved the way for many more
advancements in EMS in Saskatchewan.
30
years after Michael had perfected his moves on the dance floor
and caught Ida’s eye, his superior dancing ability caught the
eye of Mary Billay in 1975. Mary herself had had an early
exposure to the world of medical aid. She had taken a first aid
course in 1952 with her first husband. Mary was a school teacher
and spent the last 17 years of her career as an elementary
school principal at Meath Park. She retired from teaching in
1984 and received her designation along with Michael as an EMT
that same year. In 1985, she moved to Blaine Lake full time and
supported Michael in the running of Blaine Lake Ambulance as a
casual EMT and full time office manager. She draws the parallel
between teaching and being an EMT. For one, you have to know how
to talk to people and two, you genuinely must like dealing with
people in any situation.
On May
31st, 1996, Michael and Mary were travelling back to
Saskatoon from Blaine Lake when they were struck by a school
bus. The accident left Mary with bruising and broken ribs.
Michael was left with a collapsed lung and a concussion. The
owner of Blaine Lake Ambulance had to put his trust with his
health in the hands of his very own staff. He had spent 3 weeks
in the hospital in recovery. He had celebrated his 75th
birthday months prior to the accident – maybe now it was time to
slow time and smell the roses.
The
third generation of EMS within the Dutchak family made its
appearance at Blaine Lake Ambulance in May of 1992. Keith
Woytiuk, son of Barbara, started working as an EMR for Grandpa
Mike. Keith later obtained his EMT designation in October of
1996. The third generation was also showing it stuff in Prince
Albert at Parkland Ambulance with the appearance of Trevor
Dutchak, Barry’s son.

The
use of radios did not start full time for Blaine Lake Ambulance
until 1994. Dispatching services were first provided by MD
Ambulance and later Parkland Ambulance with the 310-5000
emergency number. Provincial 911 did not take effect for the
Blaine Lake Ambulance coverage area until 2001. But old habits
die hard. The original 7 digit number is still in effect but on
a diverter to 911 for those of the older generation who think
that Michael is still around to answer the phone.
On
December 15th, 1998, Michael sold Blaine Lake
Ambulance to his grandson Keith and wife Diana who also holds an
EMT designation. Since taking over, Keith and Diana have
extended the base by building a 900 square foot addition for two
ambulance bays. Keith, like his grandfather, has found the
perfect balance between business and patient care, always
recognizing that patient care comes first. You treat each and
every patient as if they were part of your family is something
Keith tells all of his employees. That’s what Keith’s first
employer in EMS impressed upon him. In its 50 years since its
inception, Blaine Lake Ambulance has employed over 100 people,
half of those as EMTs. Many individuals have used their
experiences at Blaine Lake Ambulance to further their careers
with larger companies in the urban areas or explore other
emergency services such as fire and police. Others have been
able to secure ownership of their own companies.
Michael has pretty much retired from the world of EMS. And he
never did deliver a baby throughout his whole entire career. The
running of MD in Saskatoon has been left up to his son Dave, but
one will see Michael wondering around MD from time to time.
Michael will still tell you that the thrill of EMS is still in
his blood. Michael was quoted in the Star Phoenix in 1976 as
saying that “if someone points my way and says, “There’s the guy
that saved my life”, that’s enough for me.
So, in
this 50 Years of Family, we not only celebrate the founder of
Blaine Lake Ambulance, we celebrate what he has contributed to
EMS in Saskatchewan. We also celebrate the Dutchak children and
their children who have contributed to the building of this
legacy. There are quite a few of us that can truly say we would
not be in EMS if not for Michael Dutchak. Thank you is a very
inadequate word but the only word to say in return for all the
hard work and dedication that you Grandpa Mike have shown to EMS
in Saskatchewan. You make us in EMS proud to say we know you and
worked for you. You make us proud to be part of the 50 years of
family.
The Tradition Continues……..