Home /Hero Nominees/ Deb Yokshas
Deb Yokshas
Location Northern Utah · Wasatch Range
Field Discipline Search & Rescue · Technical Climb
Active Nominee· Class of 2026

DebYokshas.

Personal mission:Deb’s a Search and Rescue volunteer in northern Utah, lives to save others, using her climbing skills to rescue people, like a base jumper who fell 400 feet in Moab. A recent health episode, tied to her lifelong chronic illness, sidelined her from SAR, leaving her unable to work and facing setbacks. With treatments, she can climb peaks and serve again. Your votes can fund her treatments, helping her return to SAR and inspire resilience.

Discipline Search & Rescue · Technical Climb
Vote Tally
2060%
Goal 46000 votes
0% of goal 45794 votes to go

About
The Nominee.

Deb’s a Search and Rescue volunteer in northern Utah, lives to save others, using her climbing skills to rescue people, like a base jumper who fell 400 feet in Moab. A recent health episode, tied to her lifelong chronic illness, sidelined her from SAR, leaving her unable to work and facing setbacks. With treatments, she can climb peaks and serve again. Your votes can fund her treatments, helping her return to SAR and inspire resilience.

Climbing skill is her tool. Resilience is her mission.

For six years, this nominee has worked the kind of calls most people only read about — a base jumper who fell four hundred feet outside Moab. Hikers stranded on faces no helicopter can hover near. The recoveries that make the news for one day and then quietly weigh on the team for the rest of the year.

They don't talk about it for the credit. They don't talk about it much at all. They climb, they anchor, they pull people back to their families. Then they go home.

A recent health episode — tied to a chronic illness they've lived with their whole life — pulled them off the team and out of work. With the right treatments they get back on the rope, back on the peaks, back to bringing people home. The votes from this nomination fund that path.

Q.01
Sit-down
Interview
We Asked Deb —

Was there ever a moment you thought, "This is why I do what I do"? Share that story with us.

Recorded · Apr 2026|Runtime · 6:42

One of the most impactful moments during my time with SAR was my first body recovery. It was Mother's Day weekend and two teenage girls went missing on the lake. Our team searched every square inch looking for them. Hours turned to days. We knew it would be a recovery, not a rescue at that point.

After a week, we scaled back the searches and began signing up for shifts to search with sonar in pairs. Nine days had passed since they went missing. I signed up for a random shift, showed up, hopped on the boat — and we ended up finding them.

By the time we made it back to shore with the recovered young woman, the family had arrived. We shielded their daughters from the media like they were our loved ones to protect.

After that first recovery, my respect for my teammates grew tremendously. We get to use our skills to recover loved ones in areas that not many people can reach to help bring families closure.

These families would never know our names, never know the scars that we carry, the therapy we go through, the impacts on our health. The media never runs a story on the people who worked behind the scenes — and I like it that way. I get to help people during their hardest moments in life, and that is plenty rewarding.

It was the first time I'd seen or experienced anything like that. I remember so clearly the heaviness in the air that almost felt tangible.

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