Archive for October, 2007
Fire Relief Fund
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Thanks for coming back to visit! If you would like to be a guest blogger at ArmyHousehold6.com - please let Tammy know!
The Southern California chapter of Operation Homefront is offering assistance to military families who have lost homes and possessions – or just need a little extra support during the evacuation following the devastating firestorms. Operation Homefront has also created a Fire Relief Fund and is asking Americans for support.
To request assistance or for more information on the Fire Relief Fund, please visit http://www.operationhomefront.com/socal or contact Tricia de la Paz at 619-846-6491.
Amazing Video
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I saw this on Spouse Buzz and I just had to share. This video is done by Lizzy Palmer and she is only 15 years. old.
Make sure to pass it on!
Secretary Geren comes to Fort Belvoir
Posted by: | CommentsWay to go Belvoir! Also congrats to newly-promoted SGT Persina and his wife Robyn… they are my neighbors! Yesterday, Tony’s SGT stripes when pinned on by none other than Secretary Geren. How cool is that?!
BY Melina Rodriguez/Ft. Belvoir Eagle
WASHINGTON (Army News Service, Oct. 4, 2007) – Secretary of the Army Pete Geren visited Fort Belvoir yesterday to tour homes and talked with Army Families about the privatized housing initiative.
Sec. Geren asked George Washington Village residents how they felt about their new homes as he toured bedrooms, living rooms and kitchens.
“In order to have a healthy Army, we’ve got to have healthy Soldiers and we have to have a healthy Army Family, as well,” said Sec. Geren. “If you ask a Soldier, ask anyone, about what goes into their thinking about what makes a good quality of life … it would be housing, the home they live in, the neighborhood they live in. It’s no different if you’re a Soldier, a spouse or if you’re a private citizen.”
In December 2003, the Residential Communities Initiative’s initial development period began at Fort Belvoir as existing homes on post were turned over to a private housing-development company.
That company, Clark Pinnacle Family Communities LLC, which is a partnership between Clark Realty and Pinnacle, will eventually demolish and replace 1,630 homes and renovate 170 homes. When construction is complete, Clark Pinnacle will manage 2,070 Fort Belvoir homes.
So far, 36 military installations have transferred to privatized housing, with 78,000 homes under private management. RCI projects have built 11,000 new homes and renovated 10,000 homes with a goal of eventually managing nearly 90,000 homes, said Sec. Geren.
The Army has spent more than $1 billion on the initiative.
“Through this RCI initiative, we’ve been helping to leverage government assets, $1 billion worth of government assets, and invest $10 billion in quality of life for our Soldiers and our Families,” he said.
Sgt. 1st Class Mark and Coretta Wiggins attended the event and discussed their home in Lewis Village, where they’ve lived for more than a year.
They have a detached three-bedroom home with a two-car garage.
“This is more of a community, not Army housing,” said Coretta, who also grew up as an Army child. “You can see the difference.”
“As long as my Family is happy, it makes it easier for me to go to work,” said Sgt. 1st Class Mark, a chaplain’s assistant for the Military Intelligence Readiness Command Army Reserve.
Sgt. Tony and Robyn Persina came to Belvoir on a compassionate reassignment for one of their two children. They have lived in Herryford Village for two years in an Americans with Disabilities Act home. The single-level home has three bedrooms, with oversized doors and hallways.
“Your house isn’t just a house, it’s a home,” said Sgt. Persina. “It’s a lot more comfortable; our Families visit all the time.”
Five percent of the new homes built at Belvoir are ADA approved.
The secretary went on to discuss upcoming initiatives and the recently approved $100 million in funding for more than 50 existing Morale Welfare and Recreation programs and services affected by the Army’s current deployment cycles.
“RCI, and more importantly the privatized housing initiative, where you’re standing now, and the houses around you are what right looks like and a very important aspect of our military to continue to improve the quality of life for Soldiers and Families,” said Installation Commander Col. Brian Lauritzen. “But, it is one of many initiatives.”
Fort Belvoir MWR will receive $135,000 of the recently approved funding for two new full-time positions at Army Community Service.
Over the next five years, more funds will be designated for Family and Soldier support programs and services. RCI will soon complete it’s 1,000th home on Fort Belvoir.
Spouse Buzz Live headed to North Carolina
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SpouseBUZZ LIVE is headed to Fayetteville, North Carolina, home to Ft. Bragg and Pope Air Force Base on Saturday, December 1, 2007.
Mark your calendars now! Trust me , you won’t want to miss this high-energy event! I’ll be going.. are you??
More details coming soon!
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Commentary: Active Duty Amputee Inspires Others
Posted by: | CommentsBy CPT Thurman J. Saunders
As an Army nurse, my job is taking care of patients. Throughout my career I have done that in a variety of settings, from inpatient medical-surgical nursing to emergency room nursing, even in outpatient clinics.
While I always wondered, I never knew what happened to patients after they left my emergency room. I assume some returned to duty after their recovery, some decided to leave the Army after their commitments and some were medically retired.
I never took care of Maj. David Rozelle, and frankly, never knew he existed until recently. Spending six hours with a true American hero, listening to his story, made me realize how important my job is as an Army nurse and a health-care recruiter.
I met Maj. Rozelle at Boston Logan Airport. He was easy to pick out amongst the group of weary travelers that were coming out of the terminal – he had a missing right foot and lower leg.
Combat casualty
Maj. Rozelle was injured in Iraq in June 2003. He returned to combat duty in Iraq as an amputee in 2005.
We had quite a walk back to where I parked the vehicle. I almost felt bad about him having to walk that far, but I remembered that Maj. Rozelle had completed the Ironman Triathlon 70.3 at Walt Disney World. I haven’t done that and I have both legs, so I figured he would be fine.
On the drive to his hotel, I didn’t ask about his leg because I read his bio and knew what happened to it and I figured that he gets that question all the time.
The next morning, I met him in the lobby and we walked across the street to Tufts-New England Medical Center. He wasn’t there to receive care. He was there to talk during grand rounds about the amputee care center at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. There were approximately 30 surgeons and medical students there just to listen to him speak.
I learned that about 650 amputees from the war theater have been treated in Army medical facilities. Maj. Rozelle spoke about the intensive physical therapy that begins right after surgery, the physiological and psychological aspects of care, and the developments made in prosthetic care as a result.
I also learned that the goal is not to medically retire a Soldier who still wants to serve and is able to serve. Great strides are being made in helping Soldiers with amputations return to full functional ability. Not just eating a meal or brushing their teeth, but to do the jobs they could do before – such as a medic starting an IV with his prosthesis or a mechanic repairing a vehicle.
I also learned that Soldiers with amputations are getting the best medical and prosthetic care, even prostheses that regular insurance can’t buy. Our nation’s dedication to our wounded warriors is costly, including building the Center For The Intrepid at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, and the new amputee care center at Walter Reed. Both facilities have state-of-the-art technology-the future of prosthetic care today. Our wounded warriors not only deserve that, they earned it.
Helping Soldiers
Maj. Rozelle’s job at Walter Reed is to help design the new amputee care center. His goal is to help Soldiers return to “normal,” then help them go beyond that.
After his presentation, he spent 30 minutes with surgeons and students approaching him with questions and offers of praise and thanks. We left the medical center and headed toward WGBH, a national public radio station.
We arrived early and met with Lisa and Chris at the station. I listened to the interview in the technician’s booth and heard Rozelle tell his Army Story.
His vehicle ran over a land mine in June 2003 and he was the most severely injured of those in his vehicle. Doctors at a military hospital in Baghdad had told him two things that day. The first thing he was told was he was losing his foot. He signed a consent that allowed the doctors to remove what was left of his right foot.
The next thing they told him was worse. He would have to leave Iraq. I listened to Maj. Rozelle tell how leaving was worse than losing his foot. He had Soldiers that depended on him and families he had promised he would take care of their Soldiers. Now they would finish the tour without him.
He talked about the care he received and how military hospitals weren’t prepared for the number of amputees as a result of this war. He made up his mind then to do what he needed to do to stay in the Army on full duty, even returning to Iraq as an amputee. During his second tour in 2005, he had 10 different prostheses that he was testing in the field to further advance amputee care. He did everything his Soldiers did and without assistance. He led by example.
I learned much about Maj. David Rozelle in just six short hours. He is an example of the Army Medical Department’s motto, “To Conserve Fighting Strength.”
My job as an Army nurse and a health-care recruiter has always been important, but after meeting a real American hero, it has added value.
(From the September 2007 Mercury, an Army Medical Department publication.)














