
New Service for
TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items from Amazon
Maine Letter Carrier named 'Hero of the
Year' for rescuing Elderly apartment fire
victim
WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- A Maine
letter carrier who pulled an elderly woman
in flames from her burning apartment
building along his postal route, then
alerted other residents to flee, was named
today as National Hero of the Year by the
300,000-member National Association of
Letter Carriers.
NALC President William H. Young will present the National
Hero of the Year award to Wayne Viger of
Turner, Maine and five other awards at a
special ceremony on Thursday, September 20
at the Phoenix Park Hotel in Washington, DC.
Viger, 55, a member of NALC Branch 241 in Lewiston, Maine
where he delivers mail, smelled smoke at an
apartment building as he was on his route on
April 3, 2006. Checking more closely, the
30-year veteran carrier heard a smoke alarm
sounding inside, and then noticed smoke
pouring through cracks in the windows and
door of a ground floor apartment.
The letter carrier pushed open the door to find an elderly
woman with her clothes aflame and her hair
singed by the fire. He pulled the woman
outside and extinguished her burning
clothing. Then he reentered the building to
check on other residents as he climbed to
the second and third floors, knocking loudly
on apartment doors and shouting to alert
residents to the danger. When the fire
department arrived, the sooty and
smoke-saturated mail carrier returned to his
post office.
The postal union's annual National Humanitarian of the Year
award will be presented to Gary Fitch of
Maplewood, Minnesota, a member of NALC
Branch 28 of St. Paul, Minnesota who rode
2,800 miles across the nation on his bike
this year to NALC Headquarters in Washington
to raise money for the Muscular Dystrophy
Association, NALC's national charity, and
collect Letters of Hope from supporters.
The Letters of Hope will be scanned on compact discs and
launched into space on a future shuttle
mission for upcoming generations to read.
Fitch, 55, was joined on his daily journey
by local NALC branches and letter carriers
who came out in droves to show Gary their
support and to honor his commitment to MDA.
In announcing the awards, Young praised the 2007 winners as
worthy additions to the long list of letter
carriers who have performed heroic and
humanitarian acts throughout the union's
history.
"As they walk and ride through every neighborhood in America
every day, letter carriers are often the
first on the scene when tragedy strikes,"
Young said. "These men and women follow in
the tradition of coming to the aid of those
in need often at risk of personal danger."
A special Carrier Alert Rescue Award will be presented to
Melvin (Gene) Kahl of Pensacola, Florida, a
member of NALC Branch 321 in Pensacola,
whose suspecting mind about mail piling up
saved an elderly man whose wife had passed
away in the home.
Kahl, 65, marked the family's car tire with chalk so that he
could judge whether it had moved when he
returned. Finding the mark undisturbed two
days later, the 21-year veteran carrier
knocked on the door. Although he could hear
someone inside, he received no response.
When police arrived, they discovered the
husband dehydrated and too weak to move,
holding the hand of his deceased wife,
singing hymns to her.
Three regional heroes will also be honored at the September
20 event:
Nathaniel Roberson of McDonough, Georgia, a member of NALC
Macon Branch 73 in Atlanta, was named
Eastern Region Hero. On his way to work on
June 1, 2006, Roberson, 55, realized that a
Henry County police officer was having
trouble subduing a man who had become unruly
during a traffic stop.
Roberson, who delivers mail in East Point, Georgia, stopped
to see if he could help. As he drew closer,
he saw blood was dripping from bite marks on
the officer's arms and the driver was trying
to grab the policeman's pistol. Roberson
helped wrestle the man to the ground, and
kept the suspect's arms pinned behind him
until backup arrived.
Debra Hamilton of Chicago, a member of NALC Chicago Branch
11, was named Central Region Hero for
administering CPR to an unconscious traffic
victim in January, 2006 as she was on her
way to work delivering mail in Chicago's
Hyde Park section. When no pulse was
detected, Hamilton, 37, ran to the trunk of
her car and retrieved a pair of sweat pants
and her bagged lunch. The carrier tucked the
pants under the woman's neck in order to
clear the airway and used a sandwich bag
from her lunch to create a protective
barrier. As she administered CPR, the woman
regained consciousness. Hamilton stayed with
the victim until an emergency team arrived.
Pattie Arismendez of Bakersfield, California, a member of
NALC Branch 782 in Bakersfield, was named
Western Region Hero. Arismendez, 43, was
driving on her route when she noticed a
toddler wandering onto a roadway ahead while
cars continued to whiz by. The carrier
stopped her vehicle, jumped out, and ran to
the baby standing in the street. Arismendez
swept the child up in her arms and carried
the little girl back to the security of her
LLV. After the child was reunited with her
mother who lived nearby, Arismendez returned
to delivering mail on her route.
Judges selecting the winners were Jordan (Bud) Biscardo,
AFL-CIO Community Services liaison at United
Way of America; Shelby Hallmark, Director,
U.S. Labor Department's Office of Workers'
Compensation Programs, and Phil Guercio,
Chief of Montgomery County (MD) Fire and
Rescue Services.
SOURCE
National Association of Letter Carriers
...
...
...