| Published
August 18, 2009 |
Volume
17, Number 8
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Pleasanton Military Families Provide Comfort to Soldiers and Folks Back Home
A group called Pleasanton Military Families (PMF) is making sure
that local troops “serving in Iraq, Afghanistan, and in the Global War
on Terrorism” know how much they are appreciated by the folks at home.
The group also supports the soldiers’ families through the anxieties of
having a loved one on active duty, often drawing more than 50 people to
its gatherings.
Along with monthly meetings, the support group
has initiated several programs that give tangible expression to their
concerns: downtown flags, remembrance streamers, care packages, and
celebratory homecomings.
Thanks to PMF, American flags have
been flying in downtown Pleasanton since the first Gulf War, when local
resident Chris Miller started the group with a few helpers. Miller, who
retired as a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve, had been a
helicopter pilot in Viet Nam. He never forgot how “disturbing” he found
the treatment of returning vets at the time. His resolve to prevent a
reoccurrence in the aftermath of a future war led to the formation of
PMF. During the first Gulf conflict, the group met weekly, providing
solace to families and a warm welcome to returning soldiers. The
American flags went up at that time—the city was very cooperative,
Miller recalls—and continue to this day, removed only during holidays.
The
yellow streamers on Main Street light posts have also been a fixture
downtown for years. Each streamer bears the name, rank, and branch of
an individual soldier on active duty. They temporarily came down last
month when the city painted all the light poles; a refashioned, more
durable version will soon replace them. A sample is up in front of
Dean’s Restaurant, Miller notes.
The group also conducts
three “pack-outs” per year, collecting items to send to the troops
overseas for the December holidays, at Easter season, and for Fourth of
July. The most recent, which took place in early June, attracted
more than 50 energetic volunteers who spent a Sunday sorting goods and
packing them up in mailing cartons. “We try to send four boxes to each
serviceman or woman, one for themselves and the others to share.” The
effort takes considerable coordination, checking that deployment
information is current to avoid sending several packages to someone on
the way home. The contents have to be appropriate to the destination—no
melting chocolate in Afghanistan, for example.
The
“Welcome Homes” can be ceremonious affairs. “We typically try to do
this as a surprise,” Miller says. Each Welcome is a mission for local
Warriors’ Watch Riders, a national motorcycle group that supports U.S.
troops. The riders first line up in the airport terminal to greet the
returning serviceperson and then provide a motorcycle escort on the
ride home. The next stage is the homecoming party, with friends,
neighbors, members of the VFW and, usually, a few city officials on
hand to mark the occasion.
PMF continues to hold support
meetings in member homes on the second Tuesday of the month. For more
information or to contribute to the group’s projects, contact Miller at
millercj3@gmail.com.
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