Honor Flights Finally Give WWII Heroes Chance to Visit Their Memorial
June 16 2008 - 5:06AM
PR Newswire (US)
HOUSTON, June 16 /PRNewswire/ -- Since the World War II Memorial
was erected on Washington DC's national mall four years ago, few of
the thousands flocking to the site daily are surviving servicemen.
Volunteer-staffed and donation-funded Honor Flights provide free
travel and guardianship for World War II veterans to visit the
monument that memorializes their service. (Photo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080616/NYFNSF01 ) (Logo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080221/NYFNSN01LOGO ) "In 10
years as an ExpressJet pilot, flying the honor flight was the most
rewarding day of my career. As an air force veteran, I felt great
pride being part of a day to honor those who gave so much," said
ExpressJet's Honor Flight pilot Jeff Rupp.
http://www.expressjet.com/ ExpressJet Airlines' charter service
will fly the Northwestern Ohio Honor Flight hub's second Honor
Flight in late June, after flying 29 veterans from Toledo on April
30 for the inaugural flight. Dee Pakulski, whose father was WWII
veteran, founded the Northwestern Ohio hub of this program after
serving as an Honor Flight guardian for a terminally ill World War
II veteran through the Michigan hub of the program.
http://www.honorflightnwo.org/. "Each day, we lose more our
greatest generation of Americans," Pakulski said. "Many of these
brave Americans returned from service after victory unnoticed. Many
of them hear words of thanks and appreciation for the first time
when they visit the Memorial." According to the honor flight
website, each day, 1200 World War II veterans die. Through the
program's TLC or "their last chance" initiative priority is given
to terminally ill veterans. "Safety is our top priority," Pakulski
said. "These veterans are in their '80s and '90s and require
wheelchairs, oxygen, and they need special travel accommodations."
ExpressJet's chartered service provided flexibility, allowing the
group to give the veterans an unforgettable day to experience the
capitol of the nation they fought to defend. Each Honor Flight hub
pays for the veterans' travel through the group's fundraising and
sponsorship efforts. Since starting in 2005, the Honor Flight
network has expanded to 30 states. A local core of volunteers
raises funds and plans trips for area veterans out of each Honor
Flight hub. Each veteran is paired with a volunteer guardian.
Though trips for veterans are free, guardians pay for their own
travel. As awareness for the program has grown, many hubs have seen
waiting lists of veterans grow into the hundreds. "We go to bed
every night knowing that as we are raising funds and planning for
the next Honor Flight, some of the veterans may not be here
tomorrow. We definitely want to provide as many trips to as many
veterans as we can," continued Pukulski. She advises anyone
interested in helping to donate funds to their local hub, serve as
a volunteer fundraiser or guardian, or set up a local Honor Flight
hub in their area. To learn more, interested volunteers are
encouraged to contact the national honor flight organization at
937-521-2400 or visit http://www.honorflight.org/.
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080616/NYFNSF01
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080221/NYFNSN01LOGO
http://photoarchive.ap.org/ DATASOURCE: ExpressJet Airlines
CONTACT: Kristy Nicholas, Director, Communications of ExpressJet
Airlines, +1-832-353-3333, +1-877-958-NEWS (6397), Web site:
http://www.expressjet.com/ http://www.honorflight.org/
http://www.honorflight.org/
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