
Nova Scotia man accepts bravery award, but events of house fire still haunt him
A Nova Scotia man who was recognized for his bravery in saving his neighbour from a house fire last year said heâs âoverwhelmed with gratitudeâ but admitted he struggled with accepting the award. âI had a really hard time figuring out how to have any kind of celebratory feeling with anything to do with the events of that night,â said Gerrid Hunt. Hunt ran into a burning home in Lower Sackville in the early morning hours of Jan. 11, 2025, and pulled out his neighbour, Jermaine Loppie, who was later placed in a coma in hospital and awoke a few days later. Loppieâs partner, Tanya Steiger, and their two-year-old daughter had managed to flee from the house. But the fire claimed the lives of three children : Alauna, 9, Chloe, 6, and Cayson, 5. Hunt was recognized Thursday with a Nova Scotia Medal of Bravery at a ceremony at Province House. Prior to the accepting the reward, he said he spoke to Loppie. Get breaking National news Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy . âI was having a hard time internalizing those feelings. Like how do I have any kind of positive feeling that has anything to do with that, the events of that night?â he said. âSo I asked Jermaine to come over to my house and him and I had a good chat and I got his blessing ... otherwise I wouldnât be here, to be honest.â In May 2025, Halifax Fire concluded their investigation into the blaze and said the cause was accidental, but noted the home lacked working smoke detectors. Hunt said the past year has been tough as he struggles to sleep and his family deals with the trauma on a day-to-day basis. âItâs a process. Iâm still working through it, you know what I mean?â he said. âMy kids are resilient ... but theyâre still working through it through counselling and all that stuff, too.â âHeroes in every sense of the wordâ Three other men were honoured with the Medal of Bravery during Thursdayâs ceremony. Richard MacPhee, Ryan OâShea and Scott Rafuse helped in the search for two missing snowmobilers in the Cape Breton Highlands during a blizzard on Feb. 14, 2025. âWith conditions deteriorating and knowing the trails, they decided to search that evening. They found one of the men after a difficult search and assisted him until he was able to get to safety,â the province wrote in a release. âThey later joined the major search-and-rescue operation that was underway and helped find the other man.â Premier Tim Houston called the all four recipients a âdistinguished and distinct group of Nova Scotians.â âWithout just a second thought at all for your own needs in service of others and recognizing those acts of selflessness is important,â said Houston. âWe canât imagine the stress that each of you must have also felt in those situations. And we recognize that today. And we thank you for being here today.â Tom Steele, chair of the Nova...
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