Sunday, April 20, 2008

Riverside Fire's Car Wash for Matt Simmons

April 19, 2008 --  Also now laughingly known as the "Four Seasons Car Wash".  This was one for the record books.

But this one for someone very special, this one was for "one of their own" ...  This one was for Matt Simmons.

The day started early enough, as car washes go, anyway.  And it started under ominous skies that were already producing light snow in outlying areas.  So far though all we had was cold rain.  Nobody would possibly get their car washed in cold and rain, and snow, right?

Wrong!

One or two cars trickled in, and we all had plenty of time in between to stand around chatting and sharing laughter, as we tried to stay warm under the pop up tents.

At this point, the best things we had going for us were hot coffee provided by the River Road Starbucks, and sticky sweet donuts donated by the South Hill Krispy Kreme.  Not a bad way to start.

Another nice touch were the small disposable hand/toe warmers provided by the South Hill G.I Joe's ... Really glad we thought of those, as the temps dropped.

But it must have been all of the heart and good-doers that made it feel warm and called forth the sunshine and cars that began arriving.  A good number of them weren't worried about getting a car wash, they were there to help the heroes who help us all.  And they were there to give back.  That alone warmed us all.

Each car was offered a hot cup of Starbucks as well as the kneeling 9-11 statuettes that we have given out for the past three years.  We hope each time they look at it, they remember Matt and all of the heroes who are more than willing to risk it all to keep them safe.

Lunchtime brought out the sun and hot, delicious Papa John's Pizzas to warm us from the inside out.  Bonus:  Hot pizza keeps your hands warm!

The weather was just unreal!  We went from rain and light snow to sun shine,  sleet, rain, hail, sun, rain, and so on.  But still the cars came!

Firefighters and EMT's showed up from all around our area.  Uniforms represented Bates Tech Fire Services (With two of our favorite heroes, Pat Piper & Jim Anderson doing their share to help), Ruston, University Place, Peninsula, Orting, Rural-Metro, as well as members of the HeroToHero.US teams, Air Force & Army. Everyone did their part.  Everyone braved the elements, and everyone was there for the right reason ... Matt Simmons & his family.

By the time the event was over, there was over $3,500 raised -- in rain, snow, & hail!

We salute everyone who gave their time, their support, and their money.  Thank you all for letting us be a part of this wonderful day!

                                       ***************

                

**Read Kathleen Merryman's TNT story about Matt's plight ...

http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/columnists/merryman/story/318301.html

Firefighter’s only hope for his health: Denver research hospital
KATHLEEN MERRYMAN; THE NEWS TRIBUNE
Published: March 26th, 2008 01:00 AM | Updated: March 26th, 2008 06:41 AM

Matt Simmons is one of the people we Americans like to call heroes. He’s a first responder, a professional emergency medical technician and a volunteer firefighter.
Since 2002, he’s answered our panicked calls when we’ve crashed, fallen, gone into cardiac arrest or suffered diabetic shock. He’s been the breath of life for scores of desperately ill or injured people. His employer, Rural/Metro Ambulance, named him its EMT of the year in 2004 and 2006.

As a volunteer with Riverside Fire Department, he’s graduated from the district’s fire academy, pulled shifts at the station and responded to calls on his own dime and time.

Now he’s fighting for his own life.

He and his wife, Michelle, figure he was putting in 100 hours a week at his job, training and volunteering in November 2006.

It was all for the family’s future.

He’d worked in restaurants and manufacturing and was in hislate 20s before he tapped into his passion for emergency medical care. He learned quickly and made great contacts throughout Pierce County. He planned to earn a fire service job in Pierce County. It would have been a job with a living wage and good insurance. In the meantime, the family rented a home and invested any left-over resources in their children, Kristina Workman, 17; Corey Workman, 15; and Kaitlin Simmons, 10.

He and Michelle joke that in late 2006, they never saw each other in daylight. She would be asleep when he crawled into bed. That’s why she did not see the sores on his legs until late November. The minute she spotted the ugly patches, she shoved him to the emergency room. Doctors tried to cure the sores and a persistent cough with antibiotics.

Those antibiotics were the first in a year and a half’s worth of treatments that have not helped him.

He’s spent seven weeks in hospitals, worked with the best local doctors, and had hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of tests, medicine and care, even a risky open-lung biopsy in February. Steroid treatments have added 70 pounds onto his frame.

But he does not have a diagnosis.

Without that, he won’t get better.

His best shot at that, his doctors have told him, is a trip to the National Jewish Research Center in Denver.

They want him to go. He wants to go.

But there is no money to do so.

There is only debt the family never imagined.

Matt had purchased insurance through work. A healthy guy, he did not notice the cap on benefits.

Sick as he was in the 2007 fiscal year, his treatments stayed under that cap.

But the surgical lung biopsy and over a month in the hospital slammed him through the ceiling by March.

“The cardio-thoracic surgeon called to ask if weknew that everything had been rejected,” Michelle said.

Michelle checked with the insurance company. There was no mistake.

The family filed a claim with the state Department of Labor and Industries, which rejected it.

They have applied for state benefits, including food stamps and financial assistance. The children are on state-subsidized insurance. Even if Matt gets onto it as well, the benefits will not be retroactive.

Hundreds of thousands of dollars in bills will still be hanging over their heads. Michelle has not added them up, and does not know the actual amount.

Their friends at Rural/Metro are helping. A police chaplain is taking up a collection at the Tacoma Police Department. One of Matt’s firefighter friends is doing the same at the Tacoma Fire Department. Lakewood Baptist Church gave them money for rent. They have a donation account open in Matt Simmons’ name at all Wells Fargo Bank branches.

In a lovely gesture, their friend Crystal Rowden of Puyallup is donating all the proceeds of her children’s book “My Daddy Can Touch the Sky.” Rowden said it will soon be available on www.authorstobelievein.com.

All of this is good. These donations will keep the family warm, fed, and in their home. They may even raise enough to send Matt to Denver in search of a diagnosis. We can hope that Jewish Research Hospital will work out a manageable payment plan.

If treatment falls into the Simmons’ insurance’s next fiscal year, that might even be covered.

But, realistically, none of this will dent the Simmons’ massive medical bills.

Matt and Michelle have no idea how they will begin chewing away at them. They cannot imagine a scenario in whichthey can pay them all. All they see is a fight for life, followed by financial ruin.

Imagine a society, please, in which a hero who falls ill does not also fall through the holes in what we call a safety net.

Another effort to help him and his family get through it all ...

http://www.unitedfff.org/id17.html

There is another planned car wash and a spaghetti feed to futher the effort.  At the spaghetti feed for the firefighters, there will be a silent auction.  There are some great items already donated, but if you can donate a really nice item (large or small), they can still use it.  Contact Ed Gorre, with Tacoma Fire Department.

Donations can be made through Wells Fargo Bank branches to help Matt.  Give from your heart ... This is YOUR chance to be a hero to a hero!

lj

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Meet the Pierce County Firefighter Pipes & Drums

We wanted to share with you the starts of a brand new Pipes & Drums Band ...  The Pierce County Firefighter Pipes & Drums   http://pcffpd.com  They debut in 2009.

We wanted to let you know how much effort goes into creating & maintaining a firefighter Pipes & Drums band.  So I'll be adding update photos here throughout their eventual debut.  Then hopefully in a year or so, we can follow up with photos of their actual performances.

Realize that this is a volunteer effort.  No one gets paid, no one is getting overtime ... This is why these bands are so special.  The band members take from their own personal time to do all of the rehearsing and get togethers to make it all perfect.

From their website ... http://pcffpd.com

Pierce County Firefighters
Pipes & Drums
 
Our Purpose

The Pierce County Firefighters Pipes & Drums band was established to promote the traditions of the Fire Service. To honor the brothers and sisters of our profession, past and present, and to increase camaraderie amongst all Professional Firefighters
 through our musical expression.
Below are some of our local, and some of our favorite Pipes & Drum bands ...
 Tacoma Scots ~~ Tacoma Scots Pipe Band
 
Seattle Firefighters Pipes & Drums ~~ SFFPD 
Sno Co Pipes ~~ Snohomish County Firefighters Pipes & Drums

Professional Firefighter's of NH Pipes & Drums ~~HNPD
Tacoma Scots Pipe Band
So enjoy the photos.  Check back every now and again to see what they're up to, and how far they've advanced.
 
We wish the Pierce County Firefighter Pipes & Drums much success.  This is gonna be fun!

FYI:  You might notice a couple folks at practice who are not professional firefighters.  The reason is that cadets and volunteer firefighters are able to practice & play with them, but are not eligible to be considered for the actual band until they are professional firefighters.

lj

Thursday, April 3, 2008

More smiles from the desert ... Loving the shirts, WSCFF Burn Calendars & Starbucks!

We received the best box of "Thank you" ever, today.  It came in from our Heroes with the 1/168 GSAB.

They sent a really nice letter of appreciation that will surely bring lots and lots of smiles.  It has photos of their camp and a lot of cool info.  But I will always err on the side of checking first, before posting just in case the info is not intended to be shared on so public a forum.

As soon as we get it cleared I will post it up here.

FYI: I am going through changes.  (Be nice!)  My laptop gave up the ghost and I have switched from my HP PC to a new Mac.  It feels like I'm learning Yiddish!  From all inputs, once I get it down, I'm gonna love it.  But in the meantime ... One of the issues is that I can't post photos onto this journal using the new machine.  Sigh.

Any of you genius types out there using a Mac to post your journal?  Could use some great pointers.

In any event, keep the pix and messages coming and we will find a way to get them up to share with all!  You have no idea how many people you are touching with your replies!

PS to Bill ... We have gotten a response from Wrangell, Alaska!  And to all of you in Wrangell, there is a deployed troop who would love to hear from you ... He is from Wrangell, and got a hat from your heroes!  In this photo, he is representing for Benton County, Washington Firefighters, and sends special thanks to Don Cherwein & the Hanford High School Girls Basketball team!

They are also extreeeeeemely happy with boxes of Starbucks coffee.  We might need to send more, they look mighty thirsty out there!  Good thing Starbucks donated so much through the Coffee Drive, or as it read on one of their boxes ..."Operation CaffeinationSounds great ... we're using that name for the coffee program!

We have promised a huuuge box of Starbucks to the unit that sends back the most responses.  Have to tell you, so far, these guys are in the lead!  (You listening, 129 CSSBlol)

Will get the thank you up as soon as we get it cleared.

*****

More messages ...

I'd like to tell the people involved in sending all these boxes of shirts to us THANK YOU!!!!

Whenever big batches of boxes arrive here, we're like kids at Christmas --- everybody hangs out knowing there is too much for one of us, so there is something in there that we might want to stick around for.

No letdown with this group.  WOW!!!!  It looked like every city in America dropped top for us.  We'd open one box and everyone was going through it looking for their special shirt.  But before we got to the bottoms of boxes the next box'd be slit and poured out and we'd start all over.

Got mine from Philly, which is pretty darned close for me.  So I can only tell you all thanks.

Next day- I was going to mail this last night but something came up.  Just wanted to tell you that as I was doing my dailys it seemed like everyone was wearing there shirts.  Couple of the guys are wearing there shirts under the uniform.  I might do that too.  It's cold here!!!!

So anyways, THANK YOU!!! This meant a lot!!!!

Keep doing the Hero To Hero program.  It really made us feel great, really just great!!!!

SFC Andy ....

*******************************************

We got the shirts a week or so ago but they held onto them as we had a casualty and some of us were scattered for a while after.  It helped our morale a lot and was kind of a healing thing when they gave them to us.  It was still kind of quiet when the Chaplain started handing them out.  We stood there taking a shirt and passing it along but when the shirts kept coming it was taking longer and the guys in the back were getting jumpy that it was taking so long but it was cuz there were messages on them and people were getting caught up in them reading.  It wasn't quiet after that, ha ha!  You'd hear a scream or a squeal when somebody would find a certain shirt and then the excitement would build.  Before we knew they were tossing out the shirts to us, it was hectic but it was fun and shirts got swapped all that day.  I got mine from Dallas and its funny.  Thanks to everybody that did this its the best care package we've got since we got here.

Sgt Benjamin, Iraq

*****

YAHOOOOOOO!!!  I GOT A SHIRT FROM HOME -- RENO RULES!!!  Please keep this program up.  We read that it's going away.  If you can find any way to keep it going you will be doing so much good for us.  This lifted our spirits so much.  So from all of us who got these shirts please keep HeroToHero.US going!!!

We have limited sending abilites on our emails system so we'll try to send you some pictures but we may have to count on snail mail for it.

Thanks again for doing this for us all!

SrA Shelly M......, in the desert

**Shelly,

Trust me, we WILL keep HeroToHero.US alive as long as our first responders continue to give the shirts off their backs.  Obviously word has gotten out to you that we have had the last PackOut, but no fear, we are just tweaking the program and it will be even better from here on!  Stand by. 

And thank you so much for the message.  We look forward to seeing your smiling faces!  lj

*********

Ma'am -

WE LOVE OUR NEW SHIRTS!!!  Cool thing happened on the way to the desert - all of the shirts smell like Starbucks!  Can't help but hold them to our noses until the smell fades.  Thank you all for thinking of this for thinking of us.  You may never know how special this was.  We had casualties and lost a couple really good guys.  You don't feel special after that you feel awful and you feel guilty that it was them not you.  You sure don't want to smile.  Some of the guys tried to stay hard when the boxes opened, but it was box after box and they started to melt.  Your program made us all smile. Thank you for that, thank you all for everything.

1Lt Cheryl K ...

***************

Dear Ms Jackson and the entire Hero-to-Hero Team,

I first wanted to say Thank You for your tremendous efforts in this very important undertaking. Troop morale, in my opinion is one of the most important aspects in The Global War on Terrorism that can be addressed. One that Our entire nation can and does participate in. And, there is no greater Nation in the world that can accomplish this mission. No greater patriots than the American Firefighter, Police Officers and First Responders that protect Our Loved ones everyday of Our lives. This being said, I would like to tell you my story!

We have a Chief Warrant Officer Gray, here in Theater who contacted you. Your response was exceptional, a shirt for each of her fellow Soldiers. Some three hundred and thirty, Chief Gray had them distributed throughout the Theater.

When I came to work one morning there they were. I was told we had one for each of us, so I just picked one up and to my amazement it was from The Great Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Blair County, Town of Duncansville, ten minutes from my home. The Police Chief, Mr. James Ott and his Officers had signed it. Chief Otts' daughter Chelsea had painted a beautiful card of thanks and the Chief attached his business card, so whomever received there shirt could get in touch. That I did, and received a much welcome reply.

I will cherish this Shirt and the card for the rest of my life as will the rest of my family. We believe that what so ever you do for one you do for all. I traveled 7800 and some miles from home and received a present from the Heart, from just miles away.

Thank all who participate in your program and let them know how much it is appreciated. Thank You and God Bless You, Zane Otto, Sgt, PA Army National Guard, Altoona, PA

Speaking of CWO Gray ...

Our shirts have arrived!  The mail clerks were a little upset with me until they found out what was in all of those boxes.  I have been busy getting all of the shirts and coffee out to the Soldiers.  Our unit is divided up on several different camps and in two different countries, so this is no easy task, but I have a lot of very enthusiastic senior leaders who are helping get the shirts to every Soldier in the unit.  Everyone here at the LSA was so excited to look through the boxes to see if they could find a shirt from their hometown or their home state.  Your program was a definite hit here.  We are about 7 months in on a 15 month deployment, so it has definitely given these Soldiers a much needed morale boost!  Thank you so much for supporting us!  We really appreciate all of the firemen, policemen, and rescue workers that have made this possible.  They have truly touched the hearts of many Soldiers.

The calendars were a big hit also!  I will be sending photos as soon as I can!

Thank you,
Anna

ANNA M. GRAY
CW2, AG

Keep 'em coming!  We're counting on you.

lj