Andrew was initially a reserved new employee who became a trusted professional colleague and an insightful and treasured friend.
Andrew had very strong technical skills in some niche areas within the lab, giving him the opportunity to work on a wide variety of projects in groups outside of the flammability lab where we worked together. Because he was loaned to other groups for his data acquisition and instrumentation expertise, he developed relationships with people outside our small group.
Inside our group, he was a trusted team player who infamously would not commit 100% to being available for a test on a specific day, but would always be the first one there on test day. “Are you available on Tuesday?” “Probably, but we’ll see.” It became a running joke, but he always came through and was a strong team player.
He was always up for a challenge and gave every task his best effort, even the ones outside of his core expertise. He tried to learn so he could have the best impact on the outcome, or if all else failed, he tried to find the right people around him to fill in the gaps.
Throughout this last week, I have heard many people share that Andrew was a good listener. He was, but it was more than that. He listened without judgment, but also challenged assumptions and dug deep with pointed questions to fully understand. And he shared his insights freely without reservation. He seemed to enjoy his role as sounding board and I always came away with better clarity. I hope he felt the same way in return.
This last week many have said Andrew was a family man who relished in his kids’ and wife’s accomplishments, both large and small. True. But beyond that, he was a champion for many of those around him. He made it a point to say “she is excellent” or “she is a great addition to the team” or “she really knows her stuff.” Many of our colleagues who work in our tight group are women and he advocated for many of us too. Andrew was a feminist (though I suspect he would scoff at that term).
This past week has also revealed that people outside of our work environment may not fully understand his work. I did have a conversation with Victoria at the Springfield Celebration of Life. She captured the flammability testing well. So, if all else fails, ask Victoria.
But for those who may not have the chance to ask: Our flammability regulations for mattresses require a complex instrumentation system to measure the heat released by the burning mattress. Andrew helped design our laboratory before we moved to our new facility in 2011 and kept it humming ever since. Our team spent hours together watching mattresses burn. When one passed, we had plenty of time to chat and share tales about our kids, hobbies, and travels while the test slowly progressed. When one failed, we each had a role, and Andrew ensured we had all the required data files so we could get the mattress off the market. (Photos attached.)
Another role we all enjoyed, was developing fire scenarios for press releases for consumer education. Andrew was the coordinator, stage manager, and director for this annual event and ensured we had planned every detail. (See videos: https://youtu.be/JWMiXSugdd4, https://youtu.be/AfPT_R2FR8A) We had talked about how the pandemic had put these events on hold and how eager he was to have another event.
I will miss the oddball memes he would send out of the blue. I will miss Andrew’s humor and honest, pointed counsel. And I will miss his steady presence. Rest in peace my friend.