Thursday, August 24, 2006

Stradley and Dukes form "Operation Arctic Linebacker"

This letter was written by USA Cares founder and operations guru Roger Stradley. He and Hugh Dukes (USA Cares Executive Director) have responded to needs in Alaska.

As many of you know, Hugh and I just returned from a weeklong trip to Alaska, where we provided 17 USA Cares briefings in six days. We covered Fort Wainwright, Fort Richardson, Eliese AFB and Elmendorf AFB and also an opportunity briefing with a family involved with the Family Assistance Center at Fort Greely. This includes a briefing to the Chief of Staff, US Army Alaska, Colonel Hagen.

We were treated very well, almost too well. As you may also know the 127D Inf. Brigade had about eight days notice that it was staying in Iraq for an additional 4 months. So instead of coming home last Tuesday, they will not come home now until the 15th of December. 68% of the unit was scheduled to depart, and the same number is arriving or has arrived, placing a terrible strain on the entire support infrastructure at Wainwright.

We have already begun to assist them; we started with eliminating the waiting list for basic family needs at the Lending Closet.

We also briefed the 4th Brigade, 25th Inf. Division rear detachment and senior spouses in Richardson. That unit leaves for Iraq in October.

We have launched Operation Arctic Linebacker because these families need our help. There are four unique situations that cause us to do this. 1) Remote location 2) Severe weather approaching 3) Unexpected extension to assignment 4) Replacements signing in now.

This is the mission statement:

In response to the unique challenges confronting the Alaskan based military units during the war on terror, USA Cares, using its national reputation and resources, coordinates both direct and indirect support to our Alaskan based military service members and their families.

These units face unexpected extension in Iraq, approaching severe winter weather, incoming families expecting to replace departing families and the impending deployment of both active and National Guard units from this remote area of operation known as US Army Alaska.

And these are some of the objectives we have set, many of them already underway.

- Eliminate all outstanding waiting lists for essential quality of life needs from local lending closets and thrift stores
- Conduct a “looking forward” assessment of needs in view of Ft Wainwright approaching 180% strength by December
- Develop the ability to provide food cards within two hours of request at both Ft Wainwright and Ft Richardson
- Develop a family services action team to overcome the time difference between Radcliff (EST) and Alaska time
- Develop, coordinate and facilitate corporate support from the lower 48 to USAAK units to include other branch of services
- Develop, coordinate and facilitate charitable and service organizational support from the lower 48 to USAAK units to include other branch of services

Pat and her team have already initiated steps to deal with the time difference, and the best news of all is that we have one of our former volunteers on the ground. Tonya signed in the day before we arrived, and immediately volunteered to rejoin USA Cares. The local Red Cross Station Chief has provided her with an office, furniture and computer, and she is already working hard to tell the USA Cares story and work with families.

We have established a checking account at the local on post MAC Federal Credit Union (They waived all fees) and are cutting checks for use at the commissary, free of charge. We have pre-positioned $5,000 in the fund (Many thanks to Republic Bank), and in a media release coming out Friday in Alaska and here in the states through America Supports You early next week we will offer others to help us help them by donating directly to an Alaska fund, for Alaskan-based troops and their families. The address to the credit union will be listed, and they are ready to take deposits, notify us of names and addresses and we will provide appropriate thank you’s and receipts. We have stated that any funds deposited in this site, will only be used for program expenses associated with assisting military families.

We believe this could very well become as big an event for us as was Operation Slugger. We have one large corporation that is going to mobilize it’s 4,000 employees to pack up items that are desperately needed in lending closets there and send them very soon. We expect other similar offers as the word gets out.


I guess if I had to sum up our view of what is happening up there, it only takes a sign to show you. There were hundreds of banners hanging on the fences that lined the road on to post, all hung there with the expectation that their husband, daddy or mom would be in their arms in just a few minutes. Instead, they still stand the wall and defend us. We owe them the best, and I know we an organization that is more than bumper sticker deep in our support to them.

We were told up there on more than one occasion, that a lot of people and come up and said they wanted to “help”, but we were the first ones to actually do something.

We did, because of a great team called USA Cares, and all the generous contributors and supporters.

Roger