Coastal Electric Cooperative employee recognized for lifesaving actions after Sapelo Island dock collapse

A person in patterned clothing holds a wooden award plaque. Background features a repeating green and white text logo on a light backdrop.
Eri­ka Block­er-LeCounte

A day devot­ed to cel­e­brat­ing the Gul­lah Geechee cul­ture on Sape­lo Island quick­ly became an emer­gency sit­u­a­tion when the gang­way con­nect­ing the sta­tion­ary dock to the float­ing dock and the Anne Marie Fer­ry came crash­ing down.

When Eri­ka Block­er-LeCounte saw the Sape­lo Island gang­way col­lapse, send­ing 20 peo­ple into the Duplin Riv­er, she didn’t dive into the water or gath­er around the slip­pery met­al to pull peo­ple in. A fisherman’s daugh­ter and a life­long coastal res­i­dent, Block­er-LeCounte knew the tides and used that local knowl­edge to make a split-sec­ond deci­sion. She ran away from the riv­er, jumped off a pier into the marsh and sprint­ed across the beach to get ahead of peo­ple being car­ried away by the cur­rent. Oth­ers fol­lowed to help. Block­er-LeCounte then wad­ed in over waist deep—careful to avoid drop-offs—and began pulling peo­ple out of the water.

Just before the col­lapse, Block­er-LeCounte was talk­ing with a woman on the gang­way who is a Coastal Elec­tric Coop­er­a­tive mem­ber and a dis­tant rel­a­tive of her husband’s. As Block­er-LeCounte ran down the beach, she could hear the woman call­ing her name. Block­er-LeCounte was able to pull her from the water and onto the beach to safe­ty. She also saved the life of anoth­er woman and assist­ed with help­ing oth­ers out of the water after they had gone in.

In recog­ni­tion of her hero­ic actions, Block­er-LeCounte, an employ­ee of Coastal Elec­tric Coop­er­a­tive, received a Life­sav­ing Award from Geor­gia EMC* dur­ing the state association’s Annu­al Meet­ing on Nov. 11, 2024, in Savan­nah.

“One thing I would like every­one to know is that you can do some­thing,” Block­er-LeCounte says.

And because she did, at least two lives were saved that day.

Block­er-LeCounte notes that many peo­ple from coastal Geor­gia do not know how to swim. Just two years before this trag­ic acci­dent, she took swim­ming lessons for the first time in her life. Fol­low­ing her hero­ic actions, Block­er-LeCounte is even more con­vinced that encour­ag­ing oth­ers to learn to swim is part of her life’s mis­sion.

Block­er-LeCounte is one of 12 employ­ees from sev­en elec­tric coop­er­a­tives in Geor­gia to be rec­og­nized with a 2024 Life­sav­ing Award, which hon­ors co-op employ­ees whose quick think­ing and actions are instru­men­tal in safe­guard­ing oth­ers from dan­ger­ous or poten­tial­ly dead­ly sit­u­a­tions.

*Geor­gia EMC is the statewide trade asso­ci­a­tion rep­re­sent­ing the state’s 41 elec­tric coop­er­a­tives, Oglethor­pe Pow­er, Geor­gia Trans­mis­sion Corp. and Geor­gia Sys­tem Oper­a­tions Corp.