In Chester, a vet helps others who still suffer

NEATLY DRESSED, and with pep in his step, Fred Johnson walked the streets of his  hometown, acting as if he were strolling along the finest boulevards, not passing boarded-up buildings and trashy lots in east Chester.

He struck up conversations with almost everyone he saw, smiling even when people turned away. He was looking for
veterans, homeless ones, drug-addicted ones, unemployed ones, lost ones. Any former military man or woman who could be helped by the 4-year-old nonprofit organization that he leads: Heroes Today.And he found them, waiting in front of the bus station, crossing the streets, lounging against city buildings.  Johnson, an Army veteran himself, calls this “guerrilla marketing,” going out and connecting one-on-one with people who need help.

“Thank you,” one man, a Vietnam veteran, whispered to Johnson after the two made plans to speak by phone later that day about the man’s troubles.

At one point, he gestured toward a grassy park where a woman and child played.

“I slept here a couple of times,” he said. “A lot of the guys I run into, I got high with
when I was homeless.”

That’s because Johnson, 41, wasn’t always the one doing the helping. Last time he was here, he was one of the lost.

Wrecked after a stint in Iraq, he spent a best-forgotten year addicted to crack and sleeping on the same streets he walks today.

Now he’s back, determined that no other veteran will suffer as he did. ”We want vets to know there’s support here,” Johnson said. “We’re not going anywhere. We’re engraved in stone now.”

‘The lowest low’

Johnson, 41, was born and raised in Chester. He joined the Army at 19. His was a fulfilling, but uneventful, stint until he was deployed to Iraq in 2004. He was based outside Baghdad in a camp nicknamed “Mortaritaville” because of the daily bombings it received. He was also part of a medical team that handled triage.

That’s pretty much all Johnson will say about his time overseas. Ask questions and he’ll just shake his head and look away. He won’t go into many details about what he did or what he saw.

“I don’t like to go there,” he said.

He returned home to Chester in November 2005. By his own account, he spent much of 2006 drunk or high. Crack was his drug of choice.

His mother threw him out of their house. He doesn’t blame her for that.

“No one wants to deal with you when you’re smoking crack,” he said. “My mom was scared of me. She
changed the locks.”

His mother, Betty Johnson, said that she did change her locks every two months, though it hurt her to see her only child this
way.

“As a mother, your heart is out there when he’s out there,” she said. “You don’t know where he is or what he’s doing.

“God took him to the lowest low.”

To support his habit, Johnson ran errands for his drug dealer. He was picked up by police for loitering. He slept in empty buildings or
the woods or open parks, or spent all night walking through the city. He attempted suicide by overdose.

“I don’t remember much of 2006,” Johnson said.

One day, he just had enough. He went back to his mother’s home. He asked her to take him to the Department of Veterans Affairs Hospital near
Baltimore.

“He just came to me and said, ‘I’m tired,’ ” his mother said. ”He brought himself in and did what he had to do to get clean and
sober.”

Johnson spent a year in the VA hospital system, battling his addictions. There, he was also diagnosed with chronic post-traumatic stress
disorder.

While he was struggling in the hospital, he had an idea for an organization that would help veterans like himself. “I probably would
have gotten off the street sooner if there was a veterans’ organization in the city,” he said.

‘A great motivator’

In the VA hospital outside Baltimore, Johnson remembers watching fellow patients line up for the daily drug dispensings and feeling their stress choking him.

Wali Mutazammil, Johnson’s roommate in Baltimore and a Heroes Today board member,
discussed the concept of the nonprofit with Johnson.

“It’s very personal,” said Mutazammil, a Vietnam veteran. “We’re here to embrace you and be with you for as long as it takes, even the rest of your life.”

After a year in the VA system, including a transfer to the Pittsburgh VA, Johnson was released in 2007. He started to make his concept a reality in that city.

Although the focus was homeless veterans, he wanted to offer aid to any veteran. He organized regular dinners sponsored by area restaurants,
connected with legal-aid associations and joined forces with other veterans-assistance organizations.

Johnson’s gift is his ability to network, and he managed to get so far with money provided by only himself and
his board members.

“He helped a lot of guys get their things straight and in order,” said Scott Havelka, secretary of the Pittsburgh chapter of the Military Order of the Purple Heart, a veterans-assistance association. “He’s a great motivator.”

Mutazammil easily listed a few of Heroes Today’s Pittsburgh accomplishments, including finding homes for the homeless and securing cheap cars for those who needed them.

“We know that we’re making a difference,” he said. “We’re still pretty much doing this out of our own hip pocket, but we don’t even think about that. We just do it.”

With the Pittsburgh organization established, Johnson brought Heroes Today to Chester.

‘A giving heart’

Johnson is one of Chester’s biggest supporters, calling it patriotic to the core. Johnson estimates that about 3,000 veterans call the city home.

But it needs more veteran-support services, he said.

“Vets, once they identify someone else is a vet, they have something to talk about,” Johnson said.

“Veterans serving veterans’ organizations are the most effective. A lot of veterans are so proud, they won’t reach out to strangers for help. Some here have been jerked around so much, they’re just tired of it.”

So, Johnson does his guerrilla marketing, walking the streets, sticking fliers everywhere he can. He’s starting a peer-to-peer support group. He’d like to find a permanent office space.

Earlier this month, Johnson organized his first major event: A job and health fair held at Chester’s City Hall. More than 100 veterans – and some
nonveterans – visited the fair, which included 15 potential employers, five colleges and representatives from different VA departments.

Betty Johnson said she was leery when she heard that her son would be moving home. But then she saw the transformation he had undergone.

“Once I saw he was so determined, I knew it was going to happen,” she said. “He has a giving heart. He’s always had a giving heart.”

And he’s committed to his cause.

“He lives, eats, breathes, sleeps Heroes Today,” said Kim Jennings, a Chester resident who has joined Heroes Today’s Veterans Outreach
Committee. “That’s all he talks about. It’s not an organization that hears your problems and says, ‘OK, we’ll see what we can do’ and leave it at that. It’s made up of a bunch of people who are really go-getters.”

For his part, Johnson is certain that he’s finally on the right path.

“I would never have imagined myself giving so much of myself without getting anything in return every single day,” he said. “It’s the motivation to help others that keeps me going.”

For more information on Heroes Today, go to http://heroestoday.org or call 888-386-9445.

Infantry Soldiers Hold Border Hilltop During Afghanistan Attack

This week, members of ‘Dog’ Company maintained their hold on a key hilltop
located just meters from the Afghanistan-Pakistan border by winning a 14-hour
firefight with insurgents.

Click photo for screen-resolution image
Sgt. 1st Class Adam Petrone, acting second platoon leader for the
101st Airborne Division’s ‘Dog’ Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment,
shown above after an enemy attack May 18, directed his platoon’s defense during
an firefight at the same location May 16 and 17. DOD photo by Karen
Parrish
 

(Click photo for screen-resolution
image);high-resolution image
available.

Army
Sgt. 1st Class Adam Petrone, filling in for a platoon leader on mid-tour leave,
was the senior soldier on the ground with the 4th Brigade, 101st Airborne
Division’s Third Platoon, Dog Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Infantry
Regiment.

The platoon was conducting a five-day operation, which included setting up a
blocking position about three kilometers from the rest of the company’s
positions.

“Our task was to destroy the enemy in the engagement area,” Petrone said.

The hilltop which the third platoon occupied is a now-disused observation
point, so some sandbag-reinforced dug-in fighting positions already were in
place. The soldiers added more sandbags when they reached position May 14, 2011
– a Saturday.

About 1 p.m. Monday, Petrone said insurgents attacked the platoon from 300
meters to the east, along the Pakistan border. The enemy used rocket-propelled
grenades, multiple machine guns and small-arms fire.

“They were set up in three different spots; I’d say there were about 15 to 20
of them,” he said.

The attack started with machine-gun fire followed by around 10 RPGs, Petrone
said. Six of the grenades hit the hilltop, while the rest went over.

“I know I felt one hit about 10 feet from my position,” he said. “They were
pretty effective with machine-gun fire; they had us pretty contained in our
foxholes.”

The platoon fired back with machine guns, squad automatic weapons, 90mm
recoilless, hand-held 60mm mortars and other weapons, Petrone said.

“We just engaged them until they stopped shooting,” he said. “Total
suppression was probably 10 minutes to push them back. They went back over the
side of the ridge – we obviously didn’t push them too far back, since they
stayed around the entire night.”

Petrone said he called for a medical evacuation after his medic was bitten
twice by a snake before the fight started. “So the whole night we were there
without a medic … [but] we had no injuries,” he said.
Intelligence reports
through the night indicated the enemy kept advancing toward the platoon’s
position. Those reports were important; the men on the hill couldn’t see more
than about 40 meters because trees and a steep drop blocked their view, Petrone
said.

Four air-weapons teams, two Apache helicopters at a time, and close-air
support F-15s and F-16s stayed on-station throughout much of the night, he said,
reporting enemy movements and firing at exposed insurgents.

Petrone theorized the insurgents thought they could take advantage of the
platoon’s location away from the company’s other elements to overrun their
position.

Air support kept pushing the enemy back, but fighters continued advancing
through the night, Petrone said. “We could hear them, but we couldn’t see them,”
he said. “We knew they were there, but we couldn’t find them.”

Around 3 a.m. Tuesday the platoon stopped hearing the enemy, Petrone said. By
that time other Dog Company elements were moving to reinforce the third
platoon’s position.

“I think [the enemy] probably saw them coming and retreated,” Petrone said.
“Plus by that time the [Apaches] had shot a lot of rounds.”

By 10 a.m. Tuesday relief was in place, Petrone said, and the platoon was
down to a third of its ammunition.

Petrone, who twice served in Iraq and is now on his third deployment, said
the third platoon’s performance was “outstanding.”

“I think everything we did was exactly what we should have done,” he said.
“We had good sectors of fire, good position, we didn’t take any injuries.”

The platoon’s previous fights have usually run 30 minutes or so, Petrone
said, with one sustained five- to six-hour contact under movement.

“This fight was the worst one I think my boys have seen,” he said. “Not the
contact; they’ve been in worse contact. But this by far was the most
nerve-wracking, because there’s nothing you can do but scan your sectors and
hope you see them before they’re within 35 meters.”

Dog Company commander Capt. Edwin Churchill monitored the fight from his
hilltop position with first platoon 1,400 meters southwest of the third
platoon’s location. The air support was helpful, he said, but couldn’t
effectively penetrate the dense trees protecting the enemy.

Around midnight, Churchill called for two 500-pound bombs on the insurgent
position.

“We only ended up engaging two more [enemy fighters] after that, for the rest
of the night,” he said. “The bombs cleared a bunch of the tree cover and … had a
tremendous psychological effect.”

Spc. Alan Vogel, a fire team leader with the third platoon, said the
ammunition supply was one of his main concerns during the night-long fight.

Vogel’s team, firing weapons including a 90mm recoilless rifle and two light
antitank weapons, fought from a dug-in position they called the “thunder
dome.”

“I had to make sure the guys weren’t firing when we weren’t getting shot at,
to conserve rounds,” he said. “We were on a mountain top, and what we had was
what we had.”

“I’m a trigger-puller too,” Vogel said. “Team leader, you’re down there
making sure that your guys are shooting, you’re returning fire, controlling
rates of fire.”

Pfc. Steven Boertmann, a 19-year-old third platoon machine gunner, carried
nearly his body weight in gear up the mountain where the fight happened.

“All together, about 120 pounds,” he said, noting he weighs 150.

Boertmann estimates he’s been in about 20 firefights during the deployment,
but this week’s engagement was a little different.

“Being so close to the Pakistan border … this time we weren’t really
ambushed, we were set into a position,” he said. Other than that, “It was what
you expect in a firefight – to get shot at.”

The platoon was divided among seven fighting positions, he said, and shouted
enemy positions and round counts back and forth to each other.

“There’s a lot of trust … you’re basically putting your lives in everyone’s
hands,” he said. “Out here, no matter what you look like, age, your personality
… everyone watches over each other. It’s like one big family.”

Boertmann likes his job, he said, because he can make a difference in a
fight’s outcome.

“This is a career choice for me,” he said.

Related Sites:
NATO International
Security Assistance Force

4th Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne DivisionRelated Articles:
‘Dog’ Company Takes Fight to the High Ground
101st Troopers Help Safeguard Paktika Province

Click photo for screen-resolution image Sgt. 1st Class Adam
Petrone, acting second platoon leader for 101st Airborne Division’s ‘Dog’
Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, shown above after an enemy
attack May 18, directed his platoon’s defense during an firefight at the same
location May 16 and 17. DOD photo by Karen Parrish
 

Download screen-resolution
Download high-resolution

Mullen: America Must Help Its War Veterans

Navy Adm. Mike Mullen spoke about service member and veteran issues to a crowd primed for a Lady Gaga show here last night.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff found a nontraditional audience for his message about the military as part of a fundraiser for the Robin Hood Foundation at the Javits Center. The group raised $132 million last year for charities all over the city, and this year announced a special fund to help veterans in Metro New York.
Mullen followed Tony Bennett — who at 84 can still bring it — and Seth Meyers of “Saturday Night Live.” The 4,000-member audience listened respectfully to the chairman, who was interviewed on stage by veteran journalist Tom Brokaw. Kid Rock and Lady Gaga followed.
Brokaw told the audience that as they were enjoying the $3,000-a-plate dinner, young Americans in Afghanistan and Iraq were putting on Kevlar and getting ready for another day of war.
“They represent less than 1 percent of the American population,” Brokaw said. “The rest of us — 99 percent — nothing is asked of
us.”
Brokaw noted that New York has a growing problem with veteran homelessness and asked the chairman what the Defense Department is doing about it. As a Vietnam veteran, Mullen said, he is particularly concerned about  the issue because veterans of that war were experiencing the same thing when the current wars started.
“My peers were still sleeping on the street in Washington and cities throughout the country, and I swore I would do whatever I could to address the homelessness challenge,” Mullen told Brokaw. “As we’ve engaged in this, I find we’ve generated homeless veterans at a higher rate than we did in Vietnam.”
The Defense and Veterans Affairs departments are working together on the issue, the chairman said, but it will require the commitment of people in local communities to solve. “I find local leaders want to structure something to take care of our veterans,” Mullen said. “The focus is on education, employment and health, and the private side has to help.”
Communities will lose a lot if they do not help the veterans of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the chairman told Brokaw and the
audience.
“More than 2 million have served in the wars, and they are a generation that is wired to serve,” he said. “They are going to make a
difference in the future. What they need is a bridge, and communities like New York need to provide that.”
Post-traumatic stress is another issue that Americans need to know about, Mullen said, because of reluctance in the military culture to seek help means that more than the reported 18 percent of today’s combat veterans are affected.
“We are fighting a stigma of asking for help, which is not strange for our country, and certainly not for the military,” the chairman said, noting that post-traumatic stress penetrates right to the heart of military families.
“It is the most significant invisible wound of these wars,” he said.
The chairman urged the crowd to reach out to the families of those who have lost someone in the wars. Many family members who have lost loved ones tell him their greatest fear is the country will forget the sacrifices service members have made, he said.
“These are extraordinary young men and women who go out every day, and in too many cases, give their lives for this country so we can be the country we are,” he added.
Mullen urged the crowd to connect with these families.
“They are very proud,” he said. “I promise you, they won’t ask for help, so figuring out how to connect with them to support them is really important.”

TRICARE Young Adult Now Open for Enrollment

Uniformed services dependents under 26, unmarried, and not eligible for their own employer-sponsored health care coverage may qualify to purchase TRICARE Young Adult (TYA), which offers TRICARE Standard coverage for monthly premiums of $186.

Complete information and application forms are  available at www.tricare.mil/tya. Beneficiaries should explore all of their health care options and costs when choosing a plan to best meets their needs.
TYA has been “fast-tracked” so enrollment could start as soon as systems changes, forms, premiums and other rules governing the program were approved and in place. TRICARE Management Activity will allow eligible applicants to be covered for the full month of May as long as enrollment forms and payment are received (not postmarked) by the regional contractor before May 31, 2011.