From Today's Alberni Valley Times
http://www.canada.com/albernivalleytimes/news/story.html?id=841c6035-ef24-4bf4-b2e6-9f81c731ebe0He will be sorely missed
Community mourns loss of family man and Peak Radio Station manager
Julia Caranci
Alberni Valley Times
Tuesday, June 17, 2008A local media figure known as a strong supporter of all things Port Alberni has passed away suddenly, leaving behind shocked and saddened friends and family.
Chris Talbot, operations and sales manager at the Peak Radio Station, died unexpectedly of a heart attack on Sunday.
On Monday, co-workers and friends expressed their disbelief and remorse.
"He was more than a boss, he was a friend," said an emotional Peak Radio afternoon show host Jolie McMullan. "He was always there if you needed that shoulder to cry on."
McMullan worked with Talbot for seven years, and said he will be sorely missed; as a person, a supervisor and a long-standing promoter of the city.
"More than anyone, he really wanted to see Port Alberni boom," said McMullan.
Paul Larsen worked with Talbot closely for five years, until the Jim Pattison Broadcasting Group purchased the station in the summer of 2006.
"We spent an awful lot of time together when I lived in Nanaimo," Larsen said, adding news of Talbot's sudden death both "shocked and saddened" him.
He reiterated McMullan's sentiments: Talbot loved Port Alberni and worked very hard to promote the city and make the station a successful venture that highlighted local events and employed local people.
Larsen, who now owns his own radio station in the Lethbridge to Medicine Hat region of Alberta, said right now his heart goes out to Talbot's family and staff at the local radio station.
Talbot not only worked to promote the city in his role as radio station manager, he also volunteered for social programs like Raise-a-Reader, which encourages and promotes literacy for all ages.
In an e-mail sent to his colleagues at North Island College, principal Tom Weegar, who worked with Talbot on the Raise-a-Reader campaign, expressed his sorrow on hearing word of Talbot's death.
"This is very sad news ... Chris was a wonderful supporter of literacy issues, and he worked closely with me on our Raise-a-Reader steering committee," Weegar wrote. "Chris has also recently joined the board of the Port Alberni Association for Community Living. Obviously, this is a very tragic event for the Alberni Valley."
In a subsequent conversation with the Times, Weegar pointed out Talbot was always one of the first to arrive at committee meetings, and was "100 % enthusiastic about Raise-a-Reader" from the moment he was approached to support the program.
Weegar planned to drop by the radio station yesterday to express his condolences.
"My thoughts and prayers are with the many, many friends and family that Chris leaves behind," his message concludes.
Rob Bye, the current general manager of Island Radio, the Pattison company that owns the Peak, spoke with the Times via telephone from a B.C. Ferry. He was on his way to Port Alberni to meet with staff at the station.
"He was a great manager," Bye said of Talbot. "He was a real pleasure to work with."
Bye also pointed out that Talbot had "a real passion for the business" and was always keen on motivating his staff.
He concluded there's no option but to focus on attempting to move on from this tragedy in the coming weeks and months.