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Posts Tagged ‘Central Whidbey Island Fire and Rescue’

Jerry Helm and his associate are available for fireman calendars, if the pay is right. (Photo courtesy Lindsey Helm)

Jerry Helm is a man of many titles.

Dad, husband, prairie heartthrob, lead mechanic for the family racing business, which features daughters Finley and Scotlyn burning up the track as members of the Washington Quarter Midget Association.

And, as of next week, the former Wolf athlete and coach will officially be the Central Whidbey Island Fire and Rescue Chief.

Helm’s swearing in ceremony, open to the public, goes down Tuesday, May 16 at CWIFR Station 54.

The event is scheduled to run from 5:00-6:30 PM, with light refreshments on the menu.

The station is located at 3253 Day Road in Greenbank.

Fire and rescue personnel are encouraged to wear their Class A uniforms, while others are requested to wear business attire.

Helm, a 1998 Coupeville grad, was a four-sport athlete for the Wolves, playing football, basketball, baseball, and track and field.

He was a co-captain on the gridiron, while earning MVP honors and advancing to state as a runner.

During his senior season at CHS, he teamed up with Damon VracinScott Stuurmans and Paul Donnellon to smash the school’s 4 x 400 record.

Helm later returned to the school as an adult, working as an assistant coach with the Wolf football program.

After a tour of duty with the engineering department at Island County Public Works, Helm transitioned into firefighting.

Beginning as a volunteer, he became a full-time firefighter with CWIFR in 2005 and captain in 2015.

Helm has been the acting chief since Ed Hartin retired at the end of 2022, capping a 13-year run with Central Whidbey.

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Your wallet could help save lives.

Central Whidbey Island Fire and Rescue is asking for the public’s help in purchasing a LUCAS 3 Chest Compression System, which would be a boon for professionals who handle medical calls from Coupeville to Greenbank.

CWIFR launched a fundraiser Wednesday to try and meet the $18,580 goal.

Many calls are for patients in cardiac arrest, and the chest compression system would be “a crew member who will never get tired, deliver perfect compressions, and can’t get hurt.”

The automated CPR device maintains “uninterrupted chest compressions over long periods,” while “ensuring chest compressions remain consistent and effective, no matter how long the call lasts.”

One recent call required CWIFR crew to provide chest compressions for more than three hours.

Having this device aboard the ambulance would also allow crew members to travel more safely, remaining in safety restraints while transporting patients to the hospital.

 

To find out more and donate to a good cause, pop over to:

Fundraiser by Jerry Helm : CWIFR- LUCAS 3 Chest Compression System (gofundme.com)

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Birthday boys CJ Smith (left) and Jerry Helm.

Birthday boys CJ Smith (left) and Jerry Helm.

One’s old enough to be the others dad … barely.

But while Jerry Helm and CJ Smith have an 18-year age gap, they share a lot in common, and not just a birthday.

One is a former Wolf star, the other a current one, and both have never been content with playing just one sport, or ever going half-speed.

Helm was a standout football, basketball and track athlete who also dabbled in baseball for a bit, while Smith has helped revive the “traditional” three-sport athlete at CHS.

After moving to Coupeville in the middle of his sophomore year, CJ, who will be a senior in the fall, has played football, basketball and baseball.

In the two previous years, not a single Wolf boy played all three traditional sports, with soccer, track and tennis luring away a number of athletes.

CJ, and younger brother Hunter, led the charge to change that during the school year that just ended, reviving memories of a time when it was common.

The comparisons between the two go deeper than just being multi-sport stars, however.

Both Jerry and CJ carry themselves with a quiet confidence, content to let their actions speak louder than their words.

That calmness and inner fire has led Helm through a meteoric rise in Central Whidbey Island Fire and Rescue and it allows Smith to very closely resemble outgoing Wolf star Aaron Curtin, another self-contained young man who prefers athletic success to scrambling to pose in pre-game photos.

I have a great deal of respect for how both of the birthday boys conduct themselves.

If you’re looking for sports role models, old school (well, not that old…) and new school, you can’t go wrong with Helm and Smith.

As they celebrate their joint cake day, united by the calendar, their success at CHS and their low-key style, we want to wish them both the best.

Happy birthday, gentlemen, and thank you for being class acts every day.

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Whidbey firefighters walk the track in full uniform. (John Fisken photos)

Central Whidbey Island Fire and Rescue guys walk the track in full uniform. (John Fisken photos)

rainbow girls

Coupeville’s Rainbow Girls join the fight.

bags

Every person has a story, and none are forgotten.

Coupeville musician Jim Castaneda performs for the walkers. (Jim Reynolds photo)

Coupeville musician/Christopher’s on Whidbey cook/international heartthrob Jim Castaneda performs for the walkers. (Jim Reynolds photo)

The sounds of cancer getting its fanny kicked could be heard for miles.

The annual American Cancer Society Relay for Life, held at the North Whidbey Middle School in Oak Harbor, drew tons of walkers, well-wishers, support crew, musicians and curious photographers.

To all involved, well done. Never give in.

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