The man appeared to be unconscious. His head was bleeding. Liz Lindgren wasn't sure whether he had a pulse.
"Should I try to give him CPR?" the 16-year-old asked her older sister, who also had seen the man wipe out on his motorcycle, hitting a concrete bridge embankment just ahead of their family's car on Hwy. 61 near Red Wing.
"Yes, yes, just go over!" Stephanie Lindgren said frantically as she called 911.
Liz, now a junior at Champlin Park High School, had recently become CPR-certified — one of 1,030 Anoka-Hennepin students to have done so during the past school year, as part of a health-class curriculum. She said that as a young girl she dreamed of what it might be like to save somebody's life.
It's something that Jeff Richards, leader of the Blaine High School health department, also thought about for years. Richards' mother died when he was 15. She had ruptured her spleen, but didn't realize it. She was lying in bed when Richards asked her if he could get her anything. She died without warning, squeezing his hand.
Richards said he would have called for help, had he known. At Blaine High, Richards often asks his students, "If you could save a life, why wouldn't you?"
Last year, Gov. Mark Dayton signed into law a CPR Training in Schools bill, which will require school districts to provide one-time, hands-on cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and automatic external defibrillator instruction to all students between grades 7 and 12. It will go into effect in the 2014-15 school year, but Anoka-Hennepin hasn't waited.
Richards founded a program, piloted it and presented it to the school board. With two dozen health teachers throughout the district on board, sixth-grade students get basic CPR education and a partial certification, followed by a refresher course in the eighth grade. Then in high school (10th or 11th grade) students are taught a variety of CPR skills over five days. Included are adult, child and infant CPR; adult, child and infant conscious and unconscious choking response, and how to use a defibrillator. Students also can choose to become CPR-certified by watching 18 instructional videos and passing online tests.