Hometown Heroes Get NY Construction Workers To Support Our Severely Wounded Veterans

Flip Mullen a retired NY Fireman and Gene Jackson a retired 638 Steamfitter , have teamed up to raise money by selling shirts , for our returning wounded veterans , many of who have lost their limbs , are wheelchair bound , severely burned , etc) .

In association with the Wounded Warriors Project they have helped by getting pro-bono treatment from NY's finest doctors , with Disabled Sports USA, Adaptive Sports Foundation, FDNY etc. , they have taken them skiing , waterskiing , racing , all types of sports which one would believe to be unthinkable for people with such afflictions .

They have also helped to get them lodging while they are here in NY , and basically have given their all to let our returning heroes know they are appreciated and help them get adapted into life once again .

The motto for Disabled Sports USA is "If I can do this , I can do anything"

Flip donating $50,000 check
Gene and Flip DS/USA

 

According to Gene , the entire shirt idea happened a few years back , when Flip thought of the idea of creating a "FDNY supports our troops" shirts , a year later came the "NYPD ..." shirts , now we have the "NY Union Construction Workers support our troops" shirts

heres a link to an article about one of WWP's many outings here in NY that Flip has organized ->LINK<-

No matter what your thoughts of war are , those severly injured guys and girls coming back (quite a few in their early 20's) need our help , and these 2 fellows walk the extra mile .

Gene Jackson will be selling shirts at my jobsite this Friday 10:30-1:00

1 Bryant Park (between 6th and Braodway , Northside of 42nd. street)

Center entrance of construction site

Front and Back

For info on how to get Gene to visit your local jobsite or union hall , please call him at : 347-515-2037 EXT 557

he would be glad to travel within reason if there is enough interest

____________________________________________

 

personal stories from the Wounded Warrior Project homepage

Melissa Stockwell

Melissa Stockwell MTWAlbert Ross WWP Alumni

 

Melissa was commissioned an officer in the U.S. Army in May 2002, after which she received training as a transportation officer. She was deployed to Iraq in March 2004, and found out right away that a transportation officer’s job is a tough one.

The roads in and out of Baghdad are mean – loaded with homemade bombs. One of those weapons took out 1st Lieutenant Stockwell’s vehicle as she led a convoy along those treacherous roads. The blast threw the vehicle into a swerve. It slammed into a guardrail and crashed into a house.

There was a lot of blood. A medic put a tourniquet on the Melissa’s leg, but she didn’t yet know her leg was gone. She got that bad news when she woke up in a hospital and talked with her husband – also a soldier, stationed in another part of Baghdad.

It was a tough moment. But self pity never entered this young officer’s mind. Her thoughts went straight to the troops under her command. She was grateful that she was the one who was wounded, not one of the soldiers for whom she was responsible.

Melissa was glad her husband, Dick, was there for her at that moment, and they made an immediate decision: “Let’s get on with this, and on with life.”

>From Iraq, Melissa was flown to Landstuhl Army Regional Medical Center in Germany. Her father was in Vienna at the time, and he came straight to Landstuhl, as did her sister and brother-in-law who were living in Slovakia. Melissa’s husband was also able to leave Iraq to join her and to accompany her to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., where she would spend a year recuperating and rehabilitating.

Melissa underwent 15 surgeries in all and says the treatment she received at Walter Reed was the “best care in the world. The rehab was wonderful.” However, she’ll admit to having a few bad days as she learned to walk again, and that’s when it was helpful to be surrounded by other war-wounded amputees.

Involvement with Wounded Warrior Project: When asked about the Wounded Warrior Project, the first thing Melissa mentioned was the WWP backpack she received. It’s the same with all the combat-injured troops. They’re whisked from the scene where they were wounded; their uniforms are taken at the first medical station they reach. They go one way, usually to Landstuhl; their belongings, what little they have in Iraq or Afghanistan, go somewhere else. The troops arrive at stateside military medical centers in hospital gowns; often, they don’t even have toothbrushes.

So a WWP backpack full of simple clothing and toiletries can be a big deal – a very big deal.

But that’s just the beginning of the Wounded Warrior Project’s relationship with newly injured troops. “WWP people come right to your room,” said Melissa. “They’re very visible in the lives of the patients. In the hospital, you see the WWP name everywhere. It’s very comforting to know, right away, that there’s an organization out there helping.”

Melissa’s first experiences with WWP athletic rehabilitation programs came with a skiing trip to Breckenridge, Colorado, and with the SoldierRide cycling event. She’s completely clear about the value of these programs. “Skiing was absolutely the best experience I had after being hurt. I felt so free, just to fly down the side of a mountain.”

Employment Narrative: At the time of this interview in 2006, Melissa was earning a second bachelor’s degree, this time in prosthetics from Century College in Minnesota. She said she felt absolute joy when she made a prosthetic leg for a ten-year-old girl, watched the child put the leg on, get up and jump around. In the future, she is hoping to help wounded soldiers coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan get their lives back through prosthetic care.

Feelings about Helping Other Vets thru WWP: “The people at Wounded Warrior Project get right in there to do such a broad range of things. I feel very honored to be a part of it,” said Melissa, who serves as Treasurer on WWP’s Board of Directors. “I love being involved with this organization. Helping others like myself lets me know that I’m having an impact.”

________________________________________

 

Wounded Warrior Project
7020 AC Skinner Pkwy
Suite 100
Jacksonville, FL 32256
toll free.:
877-TEAM-WWP
tel: 904-296-7350
fax: 904-296-7347

Wounded Warrior Project
is a non-profit organization.
Federal ID: #20-2370934

 


Related links:
http://unionreview.com/helmets-hardhats-team-building-trades-union-aid-wounded-w...

unknown , Flip Mullen,

unknown , Flip Mullen, Gary La Barbera the President of the New York City Central Labor Council and Edward Malloy President of the New York State Building
and Construction Trades Council . 9-14-07 Support Our Heroes Rally
Gene Jackson and vet whom they have helped .unknown date
unknown , Senator Hillary Clinton , Gary La Barbera and Ed Ott Executive Director New York City Central Labor Council . 9-14-07 Support Our Heroes Rally

Great work on this

Joe, You did great work on this piece, thank you. I went and posted it to Labourstart.org after getting your voice mail. I will try to give you a call at some point tomorrow since I have some company tonight. Thanks again ... really good stuff ... keep up the awesome work, bro. -Richard

Thanks Richard , I really

Thanks Richard , I really appreciate it , I took a bit of time gathering information and I have some posters I made for my jobsite to let people know what the shirts are all about . Talk to you tomorrow

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