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Headlines>
New England Group Keeps Troops Warm
4 Oct 2006
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New England Group Keeps Troops
Warm
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By Samantha L. Quigley /
American Forces Press Service
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New
England Caring For Our Military
volunteers, a Massachusetts-based
nonprofit organization, help get
fleece blankets ready to ship to
servicemembers serving away from home
Sept. 11. Each of nearly 1,200
blankets, which an area textile mill
donated, was accompanied by a letter
thanking the troops for their service
and explaining who was involved in
getting the blankets to them. Courtesy
photo
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New
England Caring For Our Military
volunteers help get fleece blankets
ready to ship to servicemembers
serving away from home Sept. 11. An
area textile mill donated the blankets.
Courtesy
photo
|
Nearly
1,200 donated fleece blankets fill the
driveway of New England Caring For Our
Military's founder Jim
Sereigo-Wareing. They were packaged
for shipping to servicemembers serving
overseas Sept. 11. Courtesy
photo
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WASHINGTON, Oct. 4, 2006 - A
group from Massachusetts worked diligently on the
fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks to keep the nation’s servicemembers warm.
“I
really wanted to have something on Sept. 11 to
honor the victims, and what better way than to
send care packages?” Jim Sereigo-Wareing, founder
of “New England Caring For Our Military,” said.
Those
care packages contained fleece blankets donated by
Malden Mills, Sereigo-Wareing’s former employer.
The company invented Polartec, a synthetic fleece
fabric, which is used in the cold weather systems
it designs for U.S. Special Forces, according to
the Malden Mills Web site.
Class
Incorporated, an organization that helps the
disabled get into the workforce, and a local
senior citizens center provided some volunteers to
help box the blankets. Middle school students
worked alongside the other volunteers to fill out
address labels for the boxes that included a
letter explaining how these small pieces of home
found their way to the deserts of Iraq and
Afghanistan.
“We were trying to get a
community effort in sending that one item to the
(servicemembers),” Sereigo-Wareing said. “It was
pretty successful.”
Sereigo-Wareing
held back about 150 of the 1,200 blankets for a
special project, he said. He’s hoping to deliver
the blankets, along with letters of thanks from
area students, to servicemembers recovering at
Washington-area military hospitals for Veterans
Day.
While New England Caring For Our
Military doesn’t focus on blankets, it does work
to make sure servicemembers around the globe get
“warm fuzzies” from home.
The
organization, which hopes to expand to every New
England state within a year, is a member of
America Supports You, a Defense Department program
highlighting ways Americans and the corporate
sector are supporting the nation’s servicemembers.
“Our
care packages are usually specific to an
individual,” Sereigo-Wareing said. “Usually
(servicemembers) go to the America Supports You
Web site and find our organization, … then they go
to our Web site and submit their information.”
Area
classrooms generally take a couple of boxes each.
The class works from a servicemember’s wish list
to fill the boxes with entertainment, food and
comfort items, he said.
“I don’t do very
much other than organize it,” Sereigo-Wareing said.
These
collection efforts aren’t the only things
Sereigo-Wareing is organizing these days. He’s
also working on a new way for the nonprofit group
to raise funds to cover the cost of shipping the
boxes overseas -- a new Massachusetts license
plate. His design depicts a bald eagle with a
“Support Our Troops” ribbon in its beak.
The
commonwealth waived the $100,000 bond it usually
requires. Instead, Sereigo-Wareing and his
organization must secure 3,000 prepaid
applications for the plate, double the usual
number.
“That’s a big, big venture, and
it’s going, unfortunately, very painstakingly
slow,” Sereigo-Wareing said. “We only have a
couple hundred, and we’ve been doing it for seven
months.”
He approached the
legislature in hopes of speeding up the process.
Because the new plate would directly benefit the
troops, they’ve agreed to work with him after
their recess.
When the plates are
authorized, Sereigo-Wareing’s group will see $28
of the $40 fee from the first 3,000 plates. After
that, the entire $40 will go to the group. Based
on other plates that support nonprofit groups, he
said the income could be significant.
“The
whale plate in Massachusetts makes approximately
$1 million a year,” he said, adding that even a
quarter of that would be huge for his
organization. “What we plan on doing is keeping a
small portion of (the profits), say 25 percent,
and then the other 75 percent, giving it out to
any nonprofit in Massachusetts that supports the
military in similar ways that we do.”
He
said he hopes this will reduce the stress of
fundraising for troop-support groups.
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New
England Caring For Our Military volunteers,
a Massachusetts-based nonprofit
organization, help get fleece blankets ready
to ship to servicemembers serving away from
home Sept. 11. Each of nearly 1,200
blankets, which an area textile mill
donated, was accompanied by a letter
thanking the troops for their service and
explaining who was involved in getting the
blankets to them. Courtesy
photo Download
high res image
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New
England Caring For Our Military volunteers
help get fleece blankets ready to ship to
servicemembers serving away from home Sept.
11. An area textile mill donated the
blankets. Courtesy
photo Download
high res image
|
|
Nearly
1,200 donated fleece blankets fill the
driveway of New England Caring For Our
Military's founder Jim Sereigo-Wareing. They
were packaged for shipping to servicemembers
serving overseas Sept. 11. Courtesy
photo Download
high res image
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By Samantha L. Quigley / American Forces Press Service
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