Calgary schools offer support in wake of bobsled-track crash that killed twin teenagers - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:24 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary schools offer support in wake of bobsled-track crash that killed twin teenagers

School officials in Calgary will offer supports to students, family and staff following the deaths of 17-year-old twins Jordan and Evan Caldwell in an after-hours toboggan ride on an Olympic bobsled track.

Jordan and Evan Caldwell were straight-A students who had earned numerous university scholarships

Jordan and Evan Caldwell 'were bright lights to all that knew them,' their family said in a statement following their deaths early Saturday at the bobsled track at Canada Olympic Park in Calgary. (Submitted by the Caldwell family)

School officials in Calgary will offer supports to students, family and staff following the deaths of 17-year-old twinsJordan and Evan Caldwell in an after-hours toboggan rideon an Olympic bobsled track.

"I think it's really important when a devastating tragedy such as this occurs for us to realize that there's a whole range of responses," saidCalgary Board of Education area director Calvin Davies.

"We've put into place in our schools both here at Westmount and at Ernest Manning a very flexible support system so that we can respond to the range of emotions that take place."

The Caldwell twins attended WestmountCharter School since Grade 5, but Evantransferred to Ernest Manning High Schoollast February.

Six other teenagers were injured in the crash.

Fatal bobsled-track crash prompts school officials to provide student-support services

9 years ago
Duration 11:54
Westmount Charter School Supt. Joe Frank and Calgary Board of Education area director Calvin Davies speak to reporters about support services being made available to students, staff, and families following the fatal tobogganing incident on a bobsled track at Canada Olympic Park in Calgary.

Jordan was the student-council president atWestmountand "very active" in school affairs, said superintendentJoe Frank.

The youngest kidsat the charter school, which includes about 500 students fromGrade 5 to Grade 12, called Jordan "their rock star," the superintendent added.

Evan was also well known at Westmount before transferring to Ernest Manning tofurther his engineering studies, a fieldhe planned to pursue at Queen's University.

'They had so much potential'

Kelsey Kaiser, 17, was a classmate of Evan's and said she'll remember "how good of a guy he was" to all his fellow students.

"I'll remember the morning announcements he did every morning and how welcoming he made everyone feel coming into the school," she said.

"You can't really think any hard things about him, because everyone makes mistakes," Kaiser added. "And you've just got toremember what he did for the community, and how good of a friend he was and how good of a kid he was to his family."

Ernest Manning studentMegan Lance, 16, said the "whole school" felt the impact of the twins' deaths.

"They had so much potential," she said."It's just horrible."

Tributes gathered for family

Frank said students are being encouraged to talk freely but stick to factual information rather than rumours, and to share their feelings.

"We have a table set up on three levels of the school for them to provide some kind of a tribute, and those tributes will be gathered in whatever form they are and provided to the family," he said.

Flowers are placed on a fence near the start area for the bobsled track after Saturday's incident on the track that left two teenagers dead and six injured at Canada Olympic Park in Calgary. (Larry MacDougal/Canadian Press)

Students are also being asked to refrain from judging the group of eightfor their decision to enter Canada Olympic Park after hours and slide down the bobsled track on their own sleds.

"It's important for us to remember that the students involved in this event, they're teenagers," Frank said."They make some decisions about the kind of activities that they want to get involved in. Sometimes it would be a bad decision, which can lead to a tragic ending."

"We need to have our students, as much as possible, thinkabout how that can happen to anybody," he added.

"It's not about judging what decisions this group of students made."

A funeral for the twins will be held on Thursday, Feb. 11 at 1 p.m. at the Centre Street Church.