[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 147 (Wednesday, September 28, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6246-S6248]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING CHRISTOPHER LEACH AND JERRY FICKES
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, it is with a heavy heart that Senator
Carper and I come to the floor this evening to honor Chris Leach and
Jerry Fickes, two brave Wilmington firefighters who lost their lives
this past Saturday night. In any State or in any community, the loss of
a firefighter or police officer is devastating, but in our small State
of neighbors, a close-knit State with an even closer knit first
responder community, a community that includes families and multiple
generations, it is especially hard.
To those who knew Chris and Jerry, it must be little comfort now that
we are here on the floor of the U.S. Senate to pay tribute to their
lives, but in the next few minutes, we hope to capture just a fraction
of the light they brought to their families and our community with
their love and service.
Lieutenant Christopher Leach wasn't supposed to be working on
Saturday night, but he filled in for another firefighter, likely
thinking it would be a shift like any other shift. He was always
willing to step forward and serve.
After getting the call that there was a fire in a Canby Park row
house, Chris did what he had been training to do since 1993. Chris did
what he told his friends, all the way back to Salesianum High School,
he always wanted to do as long as they could remember--fight fires.
Chris grew up in the volunteer fire service. He joined the Tallyville
Fire Company in 1993 at the age of 18, rising steadily through the
ranks of the volunteer fire service to captain. The more time he spent
at the firehouse, the more he loved it. Four years later, at age 22,
Chris joined the Claymont Fire Company and served as a full-time
firefighter and EMT there.
Chris was a lifelong learner, doing whatever he could to develop new
skills to support his crewmates and help save lives.
Chris took classes all over our country, from Virginia to Texas, to
California, and his training paid off. In July 2002, at a house fire in
Claymont, a firefighter from the ladder company fell through the first
floor and into the basement. Chris and two others saved that
firefighter's life, earning Chris a series of recognitions, including
Fireman of the Year from New Castle County Volunteer Fire Service and
the Claymont Fire Company.
Several months later, Chris joined the Wilmington Fire Department,
where he was assigned to Engine 4B Platoon. He was only there for a
couple of years before being transferred to the Special Operations
Command of Engine 1B, where he was quickly recognized for his work, and
then Rescue 1B. At the time of his passing, he was serving with Engine
6.
All this time, Chris never stopped learning and improving. He never
stopped acting on his passion for firefighting. He researched and
applied for and earned a $200,000 grant for extra training and
equipment. He wrote the standard operating procedures for the Special
Operations Command. He trained as an instructor in NIMS, the National
Incident Management System, and made sure that every Talleyville
volunteer member became certified in the NIMS system. He served on the
Newcastle County Task Force Rescue Team and earned a bachelor of
science degree in fire service administration from Waldorf University.
Throughout a long and distinguished firefighting career, Chris was
constantly achieving and growing, saving lives and building new skills.
Described by so many I have spoken to as a ``firefighter's
firefighter,'' his commitment to his brothers and sisters at the
firehouse was relentless. If he thought the department needed something
done, he would go do it himself. If the fire company couldn't afford
something, he would find a way to make it happen. That commitment went
beyond just his professional leadership. I have heard from so many who
said Chris was a good, loyal, and faithful friend. He was a softball
teammate and also a practical joker, a lover of Billy Joel and Lynyrd
Skynyrd, a so-called Mr. Fix-It, and king of nicknames. He was a big
guy with a big heart and a deep voice who couldn't hide when he entered
a room. Chris was someone who volunteered at the firehouse on his days
off and visited elementary schools to talk about his love of
firefighting and to help persuade a young generation to join him.
As his friend Andy Millis described him, Chris ``was a lieutenant you
wanted to work for.'' He loved his job, he loved his colleagues, and he
loved his responsibility, but there was nothing he loved more than his
family. His mother Fran, his sister Katie and Katie's wife Carolee, his
fiancee Kate and her boys Landon and Casey. Most of all, Chris loved
his beautiful children. He said there was nothing greater than being a
father to his kids, Brendon, age 16; Abby, 14; and Megan, 12. He took
them camping and fishing, to the beach and Cub Scouts, and always found
a way to be there for their every activity. Chris lived for his kids.
Chris lost his own father Michael to cancer in 2004 and always kept
his dad's funeral card in his helmet. Chris honored his father by being
a great dad himself, just as Michael was to him. We can only hope that
in the brief time each of us has here, that we shine brightly and
relentlessly for the people we love and the community we serve. Few
shine as brightly as Chris Leach did.
With that, I yield the floor to my colleague from Delaware Senator
Carper, who will share some words about another hero we also lost on
Saturday, senior firefighter Jerry Fickes.
Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, I thank my colleague Chris Coons for
allowing me to join him and together offer this tribute to Chris Leach
and Jerry Fickes.
Earlier today, the floor was busy with activity--and really joyful
activity--as Democrats and Republicans tried to work together to come
to an agreement on a spending plan to fund our government past the end
of this fiscal year and into the beginning of the coming fiscal year.
We worked out some difficult compromises. There was actually a lot of
joy here as we said goodbye to one another and headed for our
respective States until after the election.
So on the heels of what was really a rather joyous afternoon comes a
far more serious one, and that is the opportunity to say goodbye and to
say thank you to a couple of Delawareans who were really true public
servants who tragically lost their lives this past weekend in trying to
save the lives of others--Chris Leach and Jerry Fickes. I am going to
talk about Jerry, since Senator Coons has shared with us some wonderful
words about Lieutenant Chris Leach.
On Saturday, Jerry Fickes, a 13-year veteran of the Wilmington Fire
Department, rushed into a burning home along with his colleague, Chris
and others, when a member of the team believed to be Chris became
trapped in the blaze.
They were told, I understand from those who were present at the fire,
that when the Wilmington Fire Department showed up, they were led to
believe that there were people inside the house; the house was on fire,
and they needed to be saved. Once inside the building, I think they
went into the basement, but the floor above them apparently gave way,
and their lives were lost in that fire.
Two other firefighters were critically burned, and, hopefully, they
are going to live, but one was burned on 70 percent of her body. Our
hopes and prayers are with her and with her fellow colleague who also
received very serious burn damage.
Jerry Fickes was a husband, a father, a U.S. Army veteran, and a
beloved
[[Page S6247]]
member of Delaware's firefighter family. That is a strong family, as
Senator Coons knows--a strong family and strong bond. We are very proud
of them all.
He was born not in Delaware but in Evanston, IL, to his mom Jo Ann
who sadly predeceased him, and to his father Jerry after whom Jerry
Fickes, Jr., is named.
Jerry grew up in Illinois and later moved to Overland Park, KS, a
suburb of Kansas City. Jerry's early life was full of innocent mischief
and football games outside with his neighbors and his five brothers and
sisters: Karen, Jeri, Kimberly, Steven, and David.
The neighborhood kids played together so much--constantly crossing
through each other's yards, I am told, to get to different houses--that
the neighbors were unsuccessful at keeping shrubs along their proper
line. It reminds me of growing up in Danville, VA.
When Jerry started his freshman year at Washburn University in
Topeka, KS, his grades were less than stellar, but in reality Jerry was
just bored. Once he joined the Army ROTC, things turned around. The
Army ROTC gave him structure, and he became very driven and goal
oriented. By the time he reached his junior year in college, during
which he would meet his future wife Laura while she was working the
phone in their dorm's office, Jerry had it all together.
Jerry was a serious student, but he was also known to be a fun-loving
guy. He graduated with a degree in computer science and mathematics but
also had a lot of gym credits because he made being active a priority.
His motto became ``Mind, Body, Spirit: If you have all three, then
you're sound.''
College and the ROTC taught Jerry there is lot more to learning than
just memorizing facts, and that is when everything started to click for
Jerry. He took actuarial exams before graduating college and started
his obligation to the Army with officer training in Fort Benning. He
took a test and scored so well that the Army asked him what he would
like to do. That doesn't happen every day. Jerry told them he wanted to
join the infantry because he wanted to make a difference, and that is
where we felt he could best do it.
I think that tells us a lot about the kind of man Jerry Fickes was.
His wife Laura recalls the first time she met Jerry--in a tiny office
in his dorm building where she answered the phones. When people would
call for him, everyone would say his name differently--Fix, Ficks--and
Laura could never find his name in the directory until finally one day
she met him in person. She asked him: How do you say your name? He just
replied: You can say whatever you want to say, and walked away. Little
did she or he know that someday she would take that name, just a few
years later, as her own.
Once married, Jerry had the opportunity to become an actuary with
Alico in Wilmington, DE, a company with which Senator Coons and I are
well familiar, and the newlyweds with their hard-to-pronounce last name
came to the East Coast. Jerry worked at Alico for a while and then
later became a consultant for Ernst and Young in Philadelphia.
But something always nagged at Jerry. Jerry had the heart of a
servant, and when the first gulf war came around, he knew he could use
his training in chemical warfare to be an asset to the Army. He called
his reserve unit in Kansas to be put on the activation list, but at the
time, and much to his wife's relief, he was not called up.
But Jerry wanted to do more, so it didn't surprise Laura one bit when
Jerry decided to join the Aetna Hose Hook and Ladder Company in Newark,
DE, as a volunteer firefighter. For over a decade, he selflessly
juggled his firefighting duties with a full-time career in financial
services and a new family that would eventually include two young sons,
Ben and Josh. It also didn't surprise Laura when, after 12 years of
volunteering, Jerry could no longer ignore his true calling. He gave up
his job at financial services to work full-time with the Wilmington
fire company.
From day one, Jerry jumped at the chance to take every call that came
in on his shift. Because of this, his fellow firefighters called Jerry
a dynamo. Sometimes his determination to get the job done right would
leave Jerry covered in melted roof shingles or draped in insulation
from an attic, while everyone else's gear was nearly clean. Those
mischievous days running around the neighborhood in Kansas weren't far
off. Around the firehouse, Jerry was known, very much like Chris Leach,
as a prolific prankster. His friends recall that he would often pull a
prank and then sit back, watching and waiting as everyone tried to
figure out who was responsible for this latest joke.
Jerry lived a full life, but perhaps no job was more important to him
than helping to raise two sons, Ben and Josh. He was also interested in
hearing about his sons and even about their friends, their interests,
their goals, and their projects. He was the first to help them research
a science project, chaperone big gatherings, or teach Sunday school at
Grace Lutheran Church in Hockessin.
Even though Jerry didn't care much for running, he knew how much his
son Ben did. Jerry was so interested in his son's passion that Jerry
did the first few triathlons with Ben, and this past May they both ran
a marathon. Imagine that: son and father. And they were both getting
excited to run the next race. In fact, just last week Jerry was
thrilled to learn that his son had qualified for the Boston Marathon, a
huge point of pride for him.
Ben, a Charter School of Wilmington graduate and now a freshman at
Northeastern in Boston, and Josh, a junior at Charter, both learned
from their dad what is really important in life; that is, to serve
others. To shake adults' hands and look them right in the eye, to give
up your seat on the subway or the bus or the train for somebody else.
That is the way Jerry lived his life, and that is what he passed down
to his children.
Jerry was a true public servant. He devoted his entire adult life to
others. He was also a man of deep faith. His service, and ultimately
his sacrifice, reminds me--and I know Senator Coons--of a passage from
the Book of John: ``Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay
down his life for his friends.''
While no words can ease the suffering of Jerry's family, we seek
solace in the memory of a life lived for others and a life given to
others by a brave and selfless man.
I pray and will continue to pray for Jerry's wife of 26 years, Laura;
their two sons, Ben and Josh; Jerry's dad, Jerry, Sr.; his brothers,
Steven and David; his sisters, Karen, Jeri, and Kimberly; and many,
many nieces and nephews and his brothers and sisters in the Wilmington
fire service.
Words can never express the pride we have in our hearts for our
firefighters in Delaware, the City of Wilmington, and throughout our
State. How grateful we are for their sacrifice and for that of their
families because the work they do every day and the work Jerry did and
really gave up his life for is unlike any other. From the moment he and
his fellow firefighters put on that uniform every morning, they
answered a call that they knew could put their lives at risk in just a
moment.
I am reminded of the words of the firefighters' prayer that goes
something like this: ``When I am called to duty, God, wherever flames
may race, give me the strength to save some life, whatever be its age .
. . and if, according to our fate, I have to lose my life, please bless
with Your protecting hand my children and my wife.''
The prayer embodies the selflessness that Jerry Fickes displayed
every single day. He took an oath to serve, knowing that one day he
might not come home but feeling even more strongly that he had to help
others. Now it is my hope that our community of Delaware can be a part
of protecting him and looking after Jerry's family, his wife, and
children, helping to comfort them in their time of need and looking out
for them in the days to come.
To all of Delaware's firefighters who are in mourning, who continue
to put on their gear every day to go to work to protect our
communities, we salute you. We say thank you. And thank you for your
unwavering commitment to lives lived in service to others. You are an
inspiration to us all. So was Jerry.
God bless each and every one of you, and may God bless Jerry Fickes.
I yield the floor.
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I thank Senator Carper.
[[Page S6248]]
Before we conclude, let us share our deepest gratitude to Ardythe
Hope and to Brad Speakman, two Wilmington firefighters who were also
badly injured in Saturday's fire. They are still in the hospital,
Chester Crozer, recovering, and we pray for a speedy recovery.
We are thankful as well for the safety of John Cawthray and Peter
Cramer and Terrance Tate, firefighters who were also injured in the
fire and for all of their colleagues.
For Delaware's first responder community, in some ways, tomorrow will
be like any other. Our firefighters, our police officers, our EMTs and
paramedics will be on call, keeping us safe and secure, and we, the
rest of us in our community and State and country, will go on about our
lives, many folks really not thinking about them until the moment we
need them. But no matter what we are doing and what we are thinking,
when their shift starts, they will be on it. They will be on duty ready
to run without hesitation, even into situations that would cause the
rest of us to run in the opposite direction.
As Christiana Fire Chief Rich Perillo said this past Sunday, ``the
only thing we ever signed up to do is to protect our neighbors and
neighborhoods, and that we will continue to do no matter what comes our
way.''
We are both so grateful for the dedication, the service, and the love
shown by the Delaware fire service to protect neighbors. In that sense,
today and tomorrow and the days after will be like any other in that we
can continue to rely on our first responders, and we are grateful for
that. But in so many other ways--in the ways that truly matter--it just
will not be the same.
For Chris's and Jerry's families and friends, for their brothers and
sisters at the firehouse, for all the members of our first responder
community, and for all the Delawareans who had a chance to work or
serve with them and to be protected by them, things will not be the
same. That is why we pray for their families. We pray that tomorrow
will be just a little easier for them than today and that the next day
a little easier than tomorrow, and so on, until the pain is eventually
matched by the joy that comes from remembering someone you love and by
the gratefulness we all feel for having had the privilege to know
someone special.
One of life's unsung joys is the look in a child's face in the
presence of one of their heroes. Have you ever seen a young child as a
fire truck goes by? Their eyes are wide with amazement. The station
door rises, sirens wale, the lights flash, and the bright red truck
goes by with an American flag waving off the back. As adults, we notice
it. We take notice. We wonder what might have happened, and we go back
to our day. Even though a child doesn't know where the truck is going,
they know that is what a hero looks like.
As a father, I look at firefighters like Chris and Jerry with the
same sense of awe that young children do, not just because of their
uniforms or the sirens or the truck but because of their deep and
lifelong commitment to do a dangerous job.
They loved their children and their families. They have been there
for their friends and neighbors. They have served their communities and
their brothers and sisters and firehouse tirelessly, all while risking
their lives every day, leaving for a shift not knowing if they would
come home that night or the next morning. That is what a hero looks
like.
This week and the weeks to come, I know Senator Carper and I and our
whole community will remember, mourn, pray for, and be grateful for
Chris and Jerry. Like a child watching an engine rush by, we will see
their lives fly by in our memories and our tributes knowing they went
by too quickly, leaving us before we can truly appreciate where they
are going or why. But amidst so much we cannot know, we can take solace
in knowing that they are going there for a reason far bigger than any
one of us.
And as we watch their lives pass by in our memories, we can say to
ourselves what the child says when he sees a fire truck go by: That is
what a hero looks like.
Let me leave you with the same passage from Scripture shared by
Senator Carper from John 15. ``Greater love has no one than this: to
lay down one's life for one's friends.''
Thank you, Chris and Jerry, for your sacrifice, your service, your
love, and for laying down your lives for all of us.
I thank Senator Carper for joining me tonight.
Mr. CARPER. I thank Senator Coons for those beautiful, heartfelt
words.
A few years ago, the Senator who would have joined me and who would
have joined Bill Roth before me would have been Joe Biden, who served
here for six terms. He was someone who loved the fire service in
Delaware and is still beloved by them.
I have heard Joe say a number of times--and I know Senator Coons has
as well--these words when talking to people who had a serious loss in
their life. He would say something such as this: May soon come the day
when the memory of the one you have loved and lost brings a smile to
your face before it brings a tear to your eye.
That would be my prayer for these families, the Leach family and the
Fickes family.
Thank you.
I yield the floor.
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