Class 26-65 Completes Grueling 16-Week Course
With a packed crowd featuring family, friends and other supporters, Angelina College on Monday graduated nine new firefighters in a celebration held inside AC’s Community Services building.
Cadet Ryan R. Chapa received the award for Highest Academic Achievement, while cadet Chase D. Lacey received the Most Outstanding Cadet award after votes from his classmates.


Chief Jason Pope addressed both the cadets and the crowd, lauding the cadets’ choices to enter the profession and enduring the grueling 16-week course. Pope reminded them their commitment to the academy extends to both the profession and real life.
“It takes a special person to do the work that firefighters do,” Pope said. “When these men walked through the door on the first day, it was apparent they were not prepared for what was coming. They had that ‘deer in the headlights’ look, and for good reason.
“But they learned discipline, accountability, responsibility, trust and dedication – not only to the fire service, but to life in general.”
Keynote speaker Captain Williams Gates of AC’s Fire Academy shared the true definition of a fireman.

“Ever heard the expression ‘Jack of all trades, master of none’?” Gates asked. “It’s from Shakespeare, and there’s more to the quote. It actually reads, ‘You must be a jack of all trades, master of none, though oftentimes better than a master of one.’
“These young men have endeavored to pursue a career that requires constant and continuous improvement in their craft.”
Gates also challenged the cadets to “find your mentor.”
“This is just the first, tiny little step in this process,” Gates said. “I had so many great mentors, and they taught me how to act, how to be and what to do. And hopefully, as your career progresses, you will become that mentor for others.”
Chapa, the class valedictorian, recalled the cadets’ expectations in the beginning, and how those expectations evolved into reality.
“When we first started, all we knew was lights and sirens and running into buildings,” Chapa said. “But along the way, we learned there’s so much more than that. It’s waking up every day and learning something new when your brain’s still hurting from all the information you learned the day before. It’s learning how to stay calm when everything around you is falling apart. It’s trusting your brothers with your life and having their backs at all times.”
“We earned this together.”
Lacey, a military veteran, praised his classmates for their willingness to learn from what he called “by far, the oldest cadet in the class.”
“I was by far the oldest, and they never let me live that down,” Lacey joked. “Every single one of these guys picked up what I had to share from my own experiences, and they’ve molded themselves into great leaders. They’ve pushed themselves beyond what they were capable of doing.
“I couldn’t be any prouder of all of them.”
Graduating fire cadets, along with their hometowns of record, were as follows:
Mason R. Bass (Nacogdoches), Austin R. Cadroy (Orange), William Castillo (Cushing), Ryan R. Chapa (Lufkin), Jaime Flores II (Lufkin), Garrett D. Hogg (Hudson), Chase D. Lacey (Etoile), Elijah E. Loper (Alto) and Aden M. Morris (Livingston).
Instructors and staff for Class 25-65: Jason Pope, Chief Training Officer, Angelina College Fire Academy; Shawn Dillon, Assistant Coordinator, Angelina College Fire Academy/Nacogdoches Fire Department; Kim Capps, Public Safety Specialist; and William Gates, Angelina College Fire Academy.
For further information regarding Angelina College’s Fire Academy, contact Jason Pope at jpope@angelina.edu.
Gary Stallard’s email address is gstallard@angelina.edu.



















