Tag Archives: first responders

Thank You Public Servants

The clock reads 3:18 am. I lie in bed swallowing a muffled scream at a final unexpected jolt from a nearby lightening strike. The first time this night I awoke from the storm I checked the time. It was 1:28 a.m. The storm resounding with heavy thunder, and lightening strikes scorching the air has lasted a full 2 hours. The urge to look out the window and check the nearby homes drags me from bed just as I hear the sirens of Worthington’s firetrucks. I watch the lights reflect off wet buildings up on High Street, surprised when they turn onto my street. The pumper truck stops in front of my house. Is it my own apartment building which has been hit by lightening? No, it is that of my neighbor across the street. The kind lady in the delightfully periwinkle blue house with storybook trim she tells me her daughter hates is inside. My urge to run and help seems overwhelming. I know I will be in the way so settle for getting dressed. I am ready for I know not what.

The fire personnel are pounding on her front door shouting so loud I hear them clearly through my windows, “Your house is on fire. Everybody out.” A moment’s hesitation then a cracking sound as they force entry. Firemen push into the house. The glow of flashlights show their progress through the darkened interior as smoke billows overhead. A burnt smell and smoke’s essence hang in the air amid the showering droplets of rain. Thunder continues to rumble in the distance. The sound of the engine pumping water to the hoses being dragged from the second truck, across the lawn and into the house beats a steady rhythm. Flashing truck lights pulse at the speed of my heartbeats, wounded and warmed by the sight of so many brave fire personnel rushing to protect my neighbor, her home and our neighborhood.

All I can manage is to get dressed, while they manage a very dangerous situation, weighed down in hot and heavy protective gear, moving in darkness to find the source of the fire and extinguish its power to destroy. “Such love that they are willing to lay down their life for another,” I think. It awakens my soul even as my body longs for a night’s rest. How grateful I am for Worthington’s fire and police who guard us at their own peril in the dead of night when our fears are so close to the surface and we seem so alone in the world.

It is now 4:08 am. There are 6 trucks on our street and flashing lights around the corner onto High Street. Obviously more than a single company responded to the fire. Community is too small a word for where such dedication lies. Humanity more fully defines it. These public servants define humanity. They remind us we are not alone, but part of a larger human community. I wonder anew at the public and legislative attacks (never forget SB 5) on our public workers whose only purpose is to be there for us, to keep public services available at all hours for every small mundane matter, and for every middle of the night emergency. These men and women are servants to our community. Let us remember them when we vote; not just when we vote on tax levies to support emergency personnel, but to protect their right,and the right of all of our public workers to unionize,to seek fair wages and benefits, safe and sound workplaces, and human dignity. Let us not only support them; but, let us never support those who attack them. It is now 7:33 am. A single truck and its crew stands guard, ready in case the embers from last night’s fire rekindle. The charred hole along the roofline of my neighbor’s home testifies with an acrid odor the threat which still lingers. Yet, we feel safe because our servants stand guard for us as we go about our day.

Thank you,good and faithful servants of the Worthington community,and our humanity.

 

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WE SHARE ONE HEART, By Louise Annarino, October 31,2012

We Share One Heart, By Louise Annarino, October 31,2012

 

My Dad was never home during weather emergencies. Blizzards, floods, high winds…if the first responders were called out, Dad and his brothers were at their restaurant in the heart of town providing a warm place for emergency personnel to marshall forces, take rest breaks, and get a hot meal until the crisis passed. The coffee was always fresh, and the food plentiful. Mom held down the fort at home with occasional phone calls from Dad during lulls in the action to offer her support and provide her with safety information. She sacrificed the security of Dad’s protective presence for the protection of the larger community. Thus,my parents taught us that every citizen pitches in during an emergency to assist with whatever skills they can offer; not for profit, but for the common good.

 

In the 1959 flood which inundated most of our town, including our neighborhood, Dad’s restaurant once again became the central station for emergency personnel. Mom made five gallons of beef stew in the huge pot she used to make suga (spaghetti sauce). My twelve year old brother joined the men filling sandbags atop the levee a block from our house, while I cared for my seven-months and four-years old brothers. I packed what we would need if we were ordered to evacuate the house, as Dad expected would happen.

 

When Mom called the radio station to offer our home as a refuge for those already displaced,inviting those without electricity to come eat her beef  stew, she was told we should have already evacuated ourselves. I had been telling Mom this ever since I heard the National Guardsmen shouting through a bullhorn from the Army Ducks driving down our street. She was certain my overactive imagination was in play. When the sheriff heard Mom’s radio announcement he told Dad he should run home and get us because Mom said she was not leaving.

 

Earlier,Dad had told me to dress the boys in as many layers of clothing as I could because there would not be room enough or all of us and our luggage in the car. As Dad rushed four waddling kids into the car, Mom made sure she did not forget the empty milk jugs she had filled with fresh water, and what she needed to make my brother a birthday cake the next day. Dad made us leave our toys behind, but could not talk Mom out of cake supplies. The noise of the wind and rain, army vehicles and soldiers shouting out orders, and crying neighborhood kids being hustled away by parents would have been threatening and chaotic but for my parents’ calm and steady composure.

 

Celebrating that birthday with Mom’s homemade chocolate cake,despite our sheltering relatives’ comments about how silly she was to bother with a non-necessity, assured us that no matter what happened to our home and our lives our parents would not only keep us safe, but continue to celebrate life. Like the children affected by Super Storm Sandy, we were anxious and concerned. Certainly, our parents must have been also. But, their willingness to face difficulties while assisting others who shared the same challenges, gave them and us a healthy perspective.

 

My family was grateful to the public servants who saw our community safely through every storm, and helped us all deal with the aftermath. They did what they could to ease the burdens of those who served us and our entire community. They understood the families of those first responders made sacrifices similar to their own…for the common good.

 

I am thinking of those whose homes will never be the same; and, hoping they will continue to celebrate life as they move forward with our help. I am also thinking of the first responders who ran into the burning Con Ed building in NYC to help to safety those workers on-site during the explosion, of those coast guardsmen who rescued 14 of the 16 sailors aboard HMS Bounty as she sunk beneath the waves despite the helicopters they used nearly running out of gas, of the hospital workers who evacuated NY Hospital, of those who formed a human chain up many flights of stairs to pass fuel to operate generators for babies’ incubators, and of everyone who continues to assure safety and comfort. I am thinking of their families.

 

I am thinking of the mayors, governors, and elected officials responsible for their citizens health and safety. I am thinking of President Obama who organized the federal response this way: “So my instruction to the federal agency, has been: ‘do not figure out why we can’t do something, I want you to figure out how we do something. I want you to cut through red tape. I want you to cut through bureaucracy. There’s no excuse for inaction at this point.” He expressed that the nation is heartbroken. Heartbreaking events remind us we share one heart.

 

Donations help the Red Cross provide shelter, food, emotional support and other assistance to those affected by disasters like Hurricane Sandy. To donate, people can visit www.redcross.org, call 1-800-RED-CROSS, or text the word REDCROSS to 90999 to make a $10 donation. Contributions may also be sent to someone’s local Red Cross chapter or to the American Red Cross, P.O. Box 37243, Washington, DC 20013.

Those seeking shelter or to connect with family should register on the Red Cross Safe and Well website, a secure and easy-to-use online tool that helps families connect during emergencies. To register, visit www.redcross.org or call 1-800-RED-CROSS (1-800-733-2767). This site also connects with the Twitter and Facebook accounts of users.

 

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