PSA 5/4/2026 - 5:00 p.m.: Las Vegas Fire Department Welcomes New Life on a Snowy Night
- asalas843
- 6 days ago
- 3 min read

The call came in like any other. Station 1 had been quiet that evening, the kind of slow, snowy shift where the weather keeps most people inside and the radios mostly still. Then the tones dropped. Dispatch reported a “water break.” It sounded routine enough—possibly a water pipe, maybe weather-related. The crew started thinking through the usual scenarios as they rolled out into the snow.
But on the way, the details changed. This wasn’t a water pipe break. It was a mother in active labor. By the time Blue Team pulled up to the house—just four minutes after the call—it was clear they weren’t going anywhere else. There would be no transport, no time to load up and head to the hospital. The baby was coming, right then and there.
Inside, things moved quickly. The crew shifted gears without hesitation. Training kicked in, each person falling into a role. They worked alongside AMR, focusing on keeping the situation controlled and as calm as possible for the family. There wasn’t much room for over thinking. The situation was straightforward: support mom, monitor the baby, and be ready. Within minutes, the delivery was underway. Within minutes, the delivery was underway.
“There wasn’t time to over think anything,” said Firefighter Michael Freeman. “You just fall back on your training and your team. One moment you’re thinking you’re heading to a routine call, and the next you’re helping deliver a baby in someone’s home while it’s snowing outside.”
Freeman noted the experience carried a surreal sense of timing, having recently completed his Pediatric Block Exam just days earlier. “It was strange in the best way,” he said. “Everything I had just studied was suddenly right in front of me. It felt like everything lined up exactly when it needed to.”
The mother was supported through delivery by responding crews, with her partner remaining by her side throughout the process. Responders provided continuous reassurance and medical assistance as the situation progressed. Within minutes of arrival, the baby was delivered successfully. A healthy baby boy, born several weeks ahead of schedule, entered the world under the care of first responders on a snowy Las Vegas night.
Then came the first cry.
Freeman described the moment as unforgettable. “It was an amazing experience, a moment I will never forget,” said Freeman. “Mom was a champ and Dad did great. Getting the baby stimulated and hearing its first cry, there is no better sound in the world. I still can’t believe it happened. It feels like a dream.”
Fire Chief Steven Spann praised the crew for their composure, professionalism, and ability to adapt in an unpredictable situation. “This is what being a firefighter all is about,” said Chief Spann. “It isn’t always about fires. We show up when someone needs us the most, whether it is the scariest or most special times of your life. There is no better feeling than knowing you did your job well and made a difference.”
Chief Spann also reflected on the symbolic timing of the event for the department. “Just hours before the baby was born, Captain Daniel Atencio had his last ride as he entered into retirement,” Spann said. “What better way to celebrate than helping bring a new life into the world.”
For the crew of Station 1, the call stands as a powerful reminder of the unpredictable nature of emergency service—and the moments of life that can emerge from it. For Freeman, the memory remains vivid and unchanged. “It still doesn’t feel real,” he said. “But it is.”

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