Los Angeles Times

Fireman who died in ladder fall mourned

Kelly Wong, 29, a victim of a training accident, is remembered for his humility, passion for the job

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

When Kelly Wong was a young boy and shopping with his mother in Hong Kong, he asked her for a toy.

She was a single mom, and money was tight. She reached into her pocket and showed her son the few coins she had. Wong could choose the toy, she said, or he could choose to eat. He chose to eat. Wong did eventually get a toy that he cherished for many years: a firetruck. So when he became a fireman for the Los Angeles Fire Department two years ago, graduating at the top of his recruit class, his mother was not surprised.

She told him he might even become chief some day. But Wong, who died during a training exercise this month, never got the chance.

On Friday, hundreds of mourners, including scores of uniformed firefighte­rs, gathered at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in downtown Los Angeles to pay their final respects to the 29-year-old fireman.

Firefighte­rs wore black mourning bands, with the name Wong spelled in white letters, across their badges. Wong’s flag-draped casket was driven up Temple Street in the bed of a firetruck covered in black and purple bunting. Bagpipers played beneath a blue, cloudless sky.

Wong died June 5, two days after falling 55 to 65 feet from an aerial ladder during a training exercise at the Barclay Hotel on 4th Street, according to a preliminar­y investigat­ive report from the Fire Department. He landed on the trailer deck of a firetruck.

Wong was climbing the ladder during a “simulated fire incident” when he fell, wearing full protective firefighti­ng equipment, according to the report. Three people ascended the ladder; Wong went first.

Fellow firefighte­rs and paramedics treated him at the scene before he was taken to Los Angeles CountyUSC Medical Center, where he died two days later, officials said. Investigat­ions into his death by the Fire Department and state agencies are ongoing.

At his funeral Friday, colleagues lamented an ambitious young man’s life being cut short in its prime. Wong, they said, packed a full, happy life into his 29 years.

He was a new father, leaving behind his wife, Danielle, and a 10-month-old son, Colton. He had just been approved to transfer to a new station to work alongside his two best friends at Station 9, which serves the skid row area downtown and is one of the department’s busiest.

One of Wong’s mentors, retired Los Angeles County Fire Capt. Bill Travis, said Wong would be remembered for his humility and unfettered passion for being a fireman.

“I was continuall­y amazed by his intelligen­ce, wisdom, compassion and humbleness,” Travis said. “It was exciting to mentor Kelly. I marveled at his potential and what he would become.”

Travis read a eulogy written by Wong’s mother, Anne — including the story of his wanting a toy — because she was too emotional to speak.

Wong was born in Hong Kong and immigrated to the United States with his mother when he was 8. Neither spoke English, but by the time Wong was 16, attending school in Upland, he could read, write and speak four languages and carried a perfect 4.0 grade-point average, according to his mother’s eulogy.

Wong was an avid outdoorsma­n and fitness enthusiast who worked out twice a day, colleagues said. He had been working on getting a private pilot’s license just before he died.

Wong worked for several years as a forest firefighte­r, battling wildfires with the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management, where he was part of an elite hotshot crew. He also worked for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

In August 2015, Wong graduated from the LAFD Recruit Academy on Terminal Island in San Pedro as the top academic performer in his class, according to the department. Becoming a Los Angeles fireman was his dream job.

Mayor Eric Garcetti remembered meeting Wong and how impressed he had been by him. Speaking directly to Wong’s wife and infant son, Garcetti choked up.

“He was our firefighte­r,” Garcetti said. “Not just any firefighte­r. He was an L.A. city firefighte­r, and they don’t get any better.”

Wong was last assigned to LAFD Station 92 in Rancho Park and was in the process of transferri­ng to Station 9 in skid row to work with his friends, firefighte­rs Ernie Orrante and Steve Oransky, who were groomsmen at his wedding.

A lot of people don’t want to work in Station 9, which is “the busiest firehouse in the city,” Orrante said. Wong couldn’t wait. He was working at Station 9 at the time of his fall.

“I know we’ve all seen the movie ‘Step Brothers,’ ” Orrante said, referencin­g the 2008 Will Ferrell comedy. “That kind of describes our relationsh­ip. Kelly was our best friend. Us three goofballs, we did almost everything together.”

The morning of Wong’s fall, he went to the firehouse early, thrilled to be working at his new station. For a rare moment, there were no alarms going off. Wong, Orrante and Oransky had the station’s kitchen to themselves as they ate breakfast.

“Us three monsters sat down side by side, shoulder to shoulder, laughing, making fun of each other, talking out our future, what’s going to happen throughout the day,” Orrante said. “That was the most beautiful moment; I will never forget.”

Wong had made his two friends personaliz­ed elevator picks — used to open elevators during rescues — as gifts. He told them to keep it secret or he’d have to make some for the whole crew.

Orrante and Oransky told him OK, hugged and thanked him — then promptly announced the gifts to the rest of the station, saying he’d agreed to make the tools for everyone. Wong “had such a big heart” that he agreed to do so, Orrante said.

A short time later, “Kelly climbed that aerial ladder to heaven,” Orrante said.

Oransky, godfather to Wong’s son, said Wong’s “passion for the fire service was intense” — but that he was most excited to become a new father, telling his friends about all the new books he was going to read about being a dad and about the kind of man he wanted Colton to be.

“No matter how busy he was, he’d always make time for the people he cared about,” Oransky said.

As a tribute to Wong’s fire service, a bell was rung 10 times near his casket, with his colleagues standing around him. The final ring lingered in the air of the cathedral.

 ?? Photograph­s by Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? PALLBEARER­S carry the coffin of city of Los Angeles firefighte­r Kelly Wong from a firetruck to services at Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels on Friday. He died June 5, two days after falling from a ladder.
Photograph­s by Mark Boster Los Angeles Times PALLBEARER­S carry the coffin of city of Los Angeles firefighte­r Kelly Wong from a firetruck to services at Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels on Friday. He died June 5, two days after falling from a ladder.
 ??  ?? A PORTRAIT of Wong stands in front of the cathedral. He left behind his wife, Danielle, and 10-month-old son, Colton.
A PORTRAIT of Wong stands in front of the cathedral. He left behind his wife, Danielle, and 10-month-old son, Colton.
 ?? Photograph­s by Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? AN HONOR GUARD stands near Kelly Wong’s coffin. Mayor Eric Garcetti spoke at the service: “He was our firefighte­r. Not just any firefighte­r. He was an L.A. city firefighte­r, and they don’t get any better.”
Photograph­s by Mark Boster Los Angeles Times AN HONOR GUARD stands near Kelly Wong’s coffin. Mayor Eric Garcetti spoke at the service: “He was our firefighte­r. Not just any firefighte­r. He was an L.A. city firefighte­r, and they don’t get any better.”
 ??  ?? A MOURNER lowers his head at the service for Wong, who had worked for several years as a forest firefighte­r. He joined the L.A. Fire Department in 2015.
A MOURNER lowers his head at the service for Wong, who had worked for several years as a forest firefighte­r. He joined the L.A. Fire Department in 2015.

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