Sending out ensigns on humanitarian missions, Coast Guard Academy graduates 243

May 17—NEW LONDON — The United States Coast Guard Academy graduated 243 students at its 142nd commencement Wednesday, preparing to send many to far-off cutters following their demanding but community-building 200-week educational journey.

Two Coast Guard helicopters flew overhead as the newly minted ensigns heard the words, "You may now divest yourselves of all symbols of cadet life" and consequently threw their cadet covers into the air.

The Class of 2023 ― which includes 11 people from Connecticut ― is 42% women and 34% underrepresented minorities, with three cadets from other countries: the Philippines, Costa Rica and Mauritius. They and a few students with medical issues were not among the 235 ensigns commissioned Wednesday.

"You are now leaders of people and of the Coast Guard," said U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, the keynote speaker. "You are also the leader of your own life. What type of life do you want for yourself? What do you want out of life? What meaning do you want your life to have? Think about it. It will help you act with purpose."

Mayorkas shared three leadership lessons he said Nathan Bovankovich, who entered the academy with the Class of 2023, wrote before his death: be a servant, under-promise and over-deliver, and deeper meaning can be found in a world without putting people into boxes.

According to the academy, Bovankovich was selected president as a third-class cadet ― meaning in his second year ― but chose to leave the academy before incurring a service commitment and later died by suicide.

Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Linda Fagan told cadets, "You'll instantly find yourself at the center of critically important work to ensure our national security."

She said they will lead boarding teams on vessels smuggling tons of narcotics, break ice and maintain aids to navigation to keep waterways open, respond to oil spills and investigate environmental crimes.

Fagan said the four-year journey she finished 38 years ago "at the time felt like an eternity to me," but the years since "have been nothing but a pleasure and a privilege, and frankly have gone by in a blink."

This was Fagan's first commencement since becoming commandant, but it was the last as academy superintendent for Rear Adm. William Kelly, who is retiring and becoming president of Christopher Newport University.

"Remain all-in to do what is right, regardless of your personal sacrifice that it may entail," Kelly said, "and if you remain all-in for your people ― if you care for them, if you prepare them, and if you set incredibly high expectations for them, and if you challenge them to meet those expectations ― then your unit, our Coast Guard, and the nation we love will be better for it."