Tributes have been paid to the Gordon Sinclair, Station Officer of the Herne Bay CRT, who collapsed during a training session and, despite huge efforts from his colleagues and the Ambulance Service, sadly passed away.
A post shared on social media said:
‘It is with great sadness to announce that Gordon Sinclair, the Station Officer at Herne Bay Coastguard, has passed away.
‘Gordon was a dedicated Search & Rescue Volunteer who provided inspirational leadership to his team.
‘He was highly respected both by his colleague and within the community for his invaluable contribution to the Coastguard Service during the past 20 years.
‘Gordon followed in his father’s footsteps when he joined the Herne Bay team and was due to recieve his long service Coastguard award.
‘He was a family man who leaves behind his wife and 2 children.
‘Gordon will be greatly missed by everyone who knew him and will be a great loss to the Coastguard service.’
If you have a story, video or one-off blog that you would like to share with us, then you can contact our team of former emergency services & armed forces personnel either through our Facebook page, via Twitter ( @ES_News_ ) or you can contact us via email: contact@emergency-services.news
If you run or manage a ‘job’ social media account and you would like us to share one of your stories then send us a tweet or a message!
If you would like to write an article that you would like us to share (it can be about anything to do with the emergency services / NHS) whether you serve in the emergency services / NHS or whether you are a member of the public who has had a good experience with the emergency services, then feel free to contact our team; anonymously if you prefer.
We are proud to act as a voice for the emergency services, armed forces & health service, with over 500,000 people visiting our website each month.
Before you go...
We need your help. As former emergency services & armed forces personnel, we pride ourselves on bringing you important, fast-moving and breaking news stories & videos which are free from the negative bias which is often directed at the emergency services & NHS by some sections of the mainstream media.
One of the reasons we started 'Emergency Services News' back in 2018 was because we became tired of reading badly informed stories about the emergency services & NHS which seemed only ever to highlight negative aspects of the job.
We want to be the unheard voice of the remarkable men and women who serve in the emergency services, NHS and armed forces. And with around 500k page views each month, we are getting there!
As income from ads, the mainstay source of income for most publishers, continues to decline; we need the help of you, our readers.
You can support emergency services news from as little as £1. It only takes a minute. Every contribution, however big or small, is vital for our future.
Please help us to continue to highlight the life-saving work of the emergency services, NHS and armed forces by becoming a supporter.