Volunteers at a forward-deployed location in the Arabian
Gulf region completed hours of hard work in the blazing sun recently to
build a playground for children in a neighboring town.
More than 100 volunteers participated in the project, which
included removing jagged rocks and shattered glass from the site and then
installing three playground sets and spreading sand around the new
equipment.
This effort marked the end of a four-month process, which
included planning the project, raising funds, shipping supplies from the
United States, and countless hours of work by civil engineers here to
construct the playground equipment before it was installed at the
site.
The project began when Col. Ronald Shultz, a former 321st
Air Expeditionary Group commander, visited the town and noticed dozens of
children playing in empty lots. He asked local officials if servicemembers
here could build playground equipment for the children. When the local
officials said yes, Shultz started the ball rolling by forming a committee
to plan the project.
"This project started before I arrived here," said Col. Rick
Carter, a former 321st AEG vice commander who worked on the project after
Shultz returned home. "The (committee) felt this would be a good community
event, so they started raising the money for the project."
The committee held various fundraisers, but after raising
more than $4,400, realized the playground they hoped to build would cost
much more than that. According to Carter, that is when several
"humanitarian heroes" stepped in.
Master Sgt. Lorne Peterson, a member of the Delaware Air
National Guard who was deployed to the 321st AEG when the project began,
told friends at Young Lumber Company in Wilmington, Del., what volunteers
here were planning. When company officials heard about the committee's
efforts, they donated the lumber for the project.
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Master Sgt. Lorne Peterson (Left), with Harold West, President of
Young Lumber Company, (Center), and another Air Force member (Right,
unnamed), at Young Lumber Company in New Castle, Delaware, as Mr.
West is presented a plaque of appreciation for his company's lumber
donation, along with a U.S. Flag that was flown over Oman, Jordan.
Mr. West accepted the items on behalf of Young Lumber
Company . (Photo by Senior Master
Sgt. Jerry Dougherty.) |
Peterson, who works in the 166th Civil Engineering
Squadron’s Disaster Preparedness office, is a former employee of Young
Lumber who worked there for several years. He contacted Young Lumber
Company President Harold West to seek out his help with obtaining
materials for the playground project. Young Lumber Chief Financial Officer
Kevin Doran said "Peterson was pretty relentless in getting this to
happen, and he really wanted to help try to do some good for the kids
where he was deployed overseas." Young Lumber Company, in operation since
1935, is located in New Castle, Delaware, with yards in Milford, DE and
Pedricktown, NJ. "It’s the sort of thing, helping organizations in the
community, that the company usually does quietly," said CFO Doran.
"We would not have been able to purchase all the wood, so
that was a great help," Carter said.
The committee decided to use the funds they raised to pay
for slides, swings, monkey bars, hardware and playground plans. By July 1,
all of the materials needed for the project were ready for shipment from
the United States.
"That's when we hit a snag," said Carter.
The materials sat in the United States for more than a month
awaiting shipment. But when a shipping company offered to deliver the
materials here -- free of charge -- the project started rolling again.
"(Shipping) probably would have cost us $50,000, but (the
company) brought it here and unloaded it for us," Carter said. "Then we
were able to do our part by actually putting the playground together."
When the materials arrived at the end of August, people
working on the project here faced what may have been the biggest obstacle
yet -- deciphering the playground plans and preparing the materials and
playground site for construction.
That final step in the project required nearly two weeks of
work by dozens of civil engineers and other volunteers. According to
Carter, all of the work paid off when the playground was completed and
dedicated.
Capt. Joe Morrissey, who is deployed to the 321st AEG from
the 267th Combat Communications Squadron at Otis Air National Guard Base,
Mass., was a volunteer during the project. He said the biggest payoff for
him was seeing the town's children enjoying the new playground.
"It was nice to be able to give something to the children,"
Morrissey said. "Now, they have something to play on when they get out of
school, something that is better than what they had."