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News / Northwest

Sign honors Central Valley High’s late ‘Mr. Spirit’

The Columbian
Published: August 16, 2014, 5:00pm

SPOKANE — When students return to Central Valley High School next month, they will be greeted by a new sign over the front door.

“Always believe. He did.”

Jansen Badinger was 18 years old when he drowned while attempting to swim across the Spokane River a little more than a year ago. The sign is a tribute to Badinger, who liked to greet everyone at the front door before classes started each day.

“He wanted to start people’s day off with a smile, I guess,” said Jessie Kunz-Pfeiffer, one of Badinger’s friends.

“He would beat the staff here,” said booster club member Suzy Orth.

This past school year, Badinger’s friends took up the job of welcoming students.

“They all took a turn,” said Jen Badinger, his mother.

Jansen Badinger inspired not only this sign, but a memorial bench and a scholarship fund run by the Bear Booster Club called Jansen’s Door.

The sign on the bench reads, “Jansen S. Badinger, Mr. Spirit. Smile on.”

The leadership class at CV took up the challenge of getting a plaque for the front door. Drew Keeve and Molly Tabish, who graduated in June, came up the sign’s message.

“We spent days trying to figure out what the perfect one would be,” Keeve said. He hopes that students 10 years from now can relate to what it says.

Tanner Davis, another recent graduate, led the fundraising.

Keeve said the sign weighs 100 pounds and the wall needed to be re-enforced before the sign could be installed.

It went up over the summer; some of Badinger’s family and friends came by to take a look at it and the bench.

“I don’t even know what to say,” his mother said as she looked up at the sign.

She said Badinger waited until he was 18 to get his driver’s license and told her it was because he liked spending time with her as she drove him to school.

Every morning, she dropped him off at 6:30 a.m. with his boom box so he could greet the students. He turned on the music and often danced in the foyer.

“He knew everybody in this school,” Jen Badinger said. “He was just an amazing person.”

She said she loves the sign’s message.

“He always believed that life will be better,” she said, describing him as an amazing, positive boy. “I think he’d think it (the sign) was awesome.”

“I love it,” said Brian Badinger, Jansen’s father. “I always wondered why we had to bring him to school every day at 6:30.”

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