
Speaker A
5:23 - 6:03
"When I got home, so I came in the door, I said something to her and there was no response. And I carried groceries upstairs and I saw her, she was not conscious. She had passed out before and had other issues and I had revived her a few times in the previous couple years. And I worked on her for a while and and called 911."
“When I got home, so I came in the door, I said something to her and there was no response. And I carried groceries upstairs and I saw her, she was not conscious. She had passed out before and had other issues and I had revived her a few times in the previous couple years. And I worked on her for a while and and called 911.”
And— When I got home, so I came in the door, I said something to her and there was no response. And I carried groceries upstairs and I saw her, she was not conscious. She had passed out before and had other issues and I had revived her a few times in the previous couple years. And I worked on her for a while and and called 911. And the responding paramedic turns out to be a friend of mine.
Blake Gettys, running for lieutenant governor on Shelley Hughes' ticket, is making his case to Kenai Peninsula voters through three compounding catastrophes: his wife's death, a near-fatal grizzly mauling, and the 2014 Funny River Fire. Whether personal resilience translates into readiness for the office is the question voters will have to answer.
