PDA

View Full Version : Heroes


MIKEYLIKESIT
05-29-2006, 01:26 PM
Although they are not firefighters, these two brothers deserve a great deal of respect and admiration.

Perilous spot on Fox claims 3 more lives
Yorkville dam is at top of state's repair-project list

By Antonio Olivo and Jamie Francisco
Tribune staff reporters
Published May 29, 2006


As the summer kayaking season kicked off its first weekend, three men drowned near the Glen D. Palmer Dam on the Fox River in Yorkville, a notoriously dangerous spot that state officials have been preparing to fix for two years.

The accident occurred about 1 p.m. Saturday, when two brothers tried to rescue Villa Park resident Craig Fliege, 38, who had rowed his kayak too close to the edge of the dam.

Bruce Sperling, 32, a youth pastor at a church in Lombard, and Mark Sperling, 27, owner of a home construction business, noticed Fliege caught in the whirlpool-like currents and ran into the river to try to save him, officials said. The brothers also got sucked under in the currents, which have claimed the lives of at least 13 people since the dam was built in 1960.

As news of the accident spread Sunday, local activists who have long sought to tear down the dam criticized the state Department of Natural Resources for taking too long to eliminate the safety hazard.

"It's something that has happened in the past, and if the dam is there, it'll happen again," said Tom Schrader, vice president of the non-profit Friends of the Fox River. "Sometimes people think it's a thrill to ride these rapids. They'll try to go over the dams."

Since 2004, the Department of Natural Resources has been preparing a multimillion-dollar renovation of the dam that would make it less hazardous, said Gary Clark, director of the agency's Office of Water Resources.

The planned improvements include a canoe chute that would allow boaters to go around the dam while traveling downstream, Clark said.

"We were hoping to get it fixed before we had another accident there," Clark said. "This was selected as our No. 1 project."

The dam's hazards are deceptive, with the river remaining shallow for several hundred yards before a sudden drop close to the dam's edge that creates a fierce rolling undertow that can knock a person off his feet, officials said. Signs posted along the dam's bank list the dates of drownings there since the late 1960s.

On Saturday, Fliege rowed past buoys warning of the dam's hazards, said Greg Freeman, who rents canoes and kayaks near the dam and watched the rescue attempt unfold through binoculars.

"When he got 30 to 40 feet away from the dam, he put on his life jacket," Freeman said. "It looked to me like he was talking on a cell phone right before he went over."

Freeman said he put down his binoculars to call 911. When he picked up the binoculars again, he saw the Sperling brothers--who had been preparing to rent a canoe from him--sprinting toward the water.

"It's terrible the way it happened. They just didn't realize the power of the water," he said. "If you get into that boil, you're dead. There's no second chances."

Bruce Sperling Sr., father of the two brothers, said he has often worried about the dam's safety while visiting his son Mark, who lived across Mill Street from the structure. The two brothers had lately been canoeing a lot together as a way to get past the death last year of their mother, he said.

"They were just trying to spend an afternoon together to relax," the elder Sperling said, his voice growing hoarse during a break in funeral arrangements for his two sons. He added that he was not surprised to learn that his sons tried to rescue Fliege.

"Both of them lived their lives like that, doing whatever they could do to help people," he said.

That commitment was deeply felt at Lombard Bible Church, where Bruce Sperling had been a youth pastor the last four years.

On Sunday, church members spent hours sharing memories of how the energetic young pastor changed their lives and how he had often rescued many from their own roiling waters.

"He was Christ-like," said Lisa McKay, whose son Mike turned to Bruce Sperling when she and her husband were having marital problems. He wound up counseling the entire family.

On Saturday, hours before he died, Bruce Sperling and other church members helped renovate a Lombard senior citizen's home as part of a weekend message about the parable of the good Samaritan, McKay said.

"That's what he was, the good Samaritan of Lombard," she said. "He was always going out of his way to help someone."

Several among a group of about 40 students who were part of Bruce Sperling's youth ministry wept openly over the loss of a man many considered their best friend. Bruce Sperling, a math wizard with a passion for practical jokes and Smurf figures, always listened when many adults didn't, they said.

Steve Chavez, 19, said Bruce Sperling helped him overcome difficult times.

"He was one of the first people I turned to," Chavez said. "When I met him, I had to be the shyest kid here. He really opened me up."

Nathan Greene, 17, vowed to model himself after Bruce Sperling, whom he considered a mentor.

"He always talked to me as if I were a leader and said he couldn't wait to see what I was going to become in the future," Greene said, sobbing. "When I heard how he died, I thought, `That's exactly what Bruce would do.' He would always tackle everything head-on."

GFDSlappyRob
05-30-2006, 04:41 PM
Yeah heard about that... poor families. Ya know IL needs to get rid of those damn dams (like the play on words???)!!! :eek:

jaybird210
07-13-2006, 10:06 AM
From today's Aurora Beacon-News (http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/beaconnews/top/2_1_AU13_PALMERDAM_S10713.htm)



YORKVILLE DAM TRAGEDY
Toxicology reports reveal cocaine, marijuana, alcohol coroner: drugs found in 2 victims

By Heather Gillers
Staff Writer

GENEVA — Two of the three men who drowned in Yorkville's Glen Palmer Dam in May had drugs and alcohol in their bodies, a Kane County coroner's inquest revealed Wednesday.

Chief Deputy Coroner Loren Carrera concluded, however, that the two men, a kayaker who became trapped in the dam and one of the two brothers who attempted to rescue him, were not impaired at the time of the accident, which "had nothing to do with the drugs and alcohol."

All three men were pronounced dead less than two hours after the incident at about 1 p.m. May 27, in which Mark Sperling, 27, and Bruce Sperling Jr., 31, tried to save Craig Fliege, 38.

Toxicology reports showed cocaine and marijuana in Fliege's blood and urine and marijuana in Mark Sperling's blood and urine, Carrera said. Both men also had alcohol in their blood, she said, but by most indicators, it did not exceed .08 percent, the legal limit for intoxication.

No drugs or alcohol were reported found in Bruce Sperling Jr.'s system.

A Yorkville detective investigating at the scene testified that he found no evidence that Fliege and Mark Sperling were impaired.

Both he and an investigating officer from the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) called the rolling boil created by the dam a deadly trap under any circumstances.

At least 13 others have drowned there in the past 40 years, and a dam reconstruction project is in progress.

But a doctor unaffiliated with the case who was briefed on the toxicology reports by The Beacon News after the inquest Wednesday concluded that Fliege may have been affected by cocaine when he rowed past warning buoys and entered the deadly boil.

"Without really examining him, I will say it with about 70 to 80 percent certainty that his judgment was impaired," said Riaz Baber, director of behavioral health at Provena Mercy Medical Center.

Baber based his statement on toxicology data showing a cocaine metabolite level of 999 nanograms per milliliter in Fliege's blood and 69,930 nanograms per milliliter in his urine.

"From this level, I can very comfortably scientifically say that he had done cocaine very recently, shortly before and quite a bit of it," he said.

Baber said Mark Sperling's marijuana level did not necessarily indicate that he was impaired at the time of the accident. He said the substance could have been ingested prior to the day of the drownings.

Three witnesses told Yorkville police that Fliege rowed parallel to the dam until he was even with a friend fishing downstream and then turned his bow into the dam, said William Bergland, the IDNR officer.

He said one witness believed Fliege had been swept over the dam. Bergland said two witnesses saw Fliege talk on a cell phone as he approached the dam, then hang up and put on a life jacket.

Family members questioned at the hospital said Fliege was an experienced kayaker who knew the danger of dams, Kane County Deputy Coroner Christine Thrun testified.

"They did not believe he would do something so reckless as to go over a dam for no reason," she said.

The Sperling brothers, also wearing life jackets, entered the dam to try to save Fliege, witnesses told police.

Fliege, of Oak Brook Terrace, was a heating and cooling technician. Bruce Sperling Jr., of Lombard, was a youth pastor, and Mark Sperling, of Yorkville, was a home builder.

The mother of Fliege's daughter, Shari Walsh, declined to comment for this story. The Sperling brothers' father, Bruce Sperling Sr., said he is proud of his sons.

Area officials also have commended the Sperling brothers for their bravery, and the Pittsburgh, Pa.-based nonprofit Carnegie Hero Fund Commission recently contacted Yorkville police about considering the men for a posthumous medal.

The Illinois Department of Natural Resources expects to complete the Palmer Dam reconstruction project, aimed at making the area safer, by the end of 2008.

MIKEYLIKESIT
07-13-2006, 05:48 PM
This was in the Sun Times too. It dosent change the fact that a Father lost two Sons...Two sons who died heroes.

JHR1985
07-17-2006, 01:41 AM
we had a family drown in a waterpark not far from here. sad thing

gsffpd07
05-14-2008, 12:37 AM
I was doing a search on these Mark and Bruce just to see what new things have appeared and I came across this. Thank you "MIKEYLIKESIT" for posting this it is really nice to see this story spread around more than just in my area. I knew both these great guys personally. One of my best friends is a member of that church and numerous occasions I went with him and got to know Pastor Bruce pretty well. His smile just lit up the room and no matter what mood you seemed to be in if you were near him just his aura would cheer you up. He was one of the greatest people you could have ever met. His brother was a really good guy too but only had the privilege of meeting him only a couple times when we played our yearly Thanksgiving morning football game. I do know their family would thank you for posting this and getting the word out along with labeling them as "heros" but those two would have none of that. I remember when Bruce's wife Jill spoke at their funeral and laughed as she told how Bruce was the "perfect husband", and every time she said that to him he would get angry and say that "there are many things that made him not perfect and that he made mistakes. I know if he heard someone call him a hero he would have the same response as us in that he wouldn't want to be called a hero. That just helping out another person, epically in need is something that everyone should do. For him putting his life on the line is not something he would hesitate to do again, I'm sure, if he had the chance even though it wasn't "in his job description".
Thanks
gsffpd07

R.I.P PB&Mark