The national non-profit Home for Our Troops has built houses for over 100 severely disabled veterans across America since its start-up in 2004.
Army SFC Sean Gittens won’t be one of those with a new house for his family, however, despite Home for Our Troops’ efforts to get him one. The homeowners association in his Evans, Georgia community says that the home planned to be built in his Knob Hill subdivision would lower property values and has blocked construction as a result.
The Gittens family currently rents a home in the subdivision, but after months of negotiations, the Knob Hill Property Owners Association has put their foot down against Home for Our Troops’ plans. The non-profit says it would continue towards a new design for a home for the Gittens, but the family says they no longer want to live in the community.
Sharon Gittens, the wife of Sean, told reporters this week that her family does not feel welcome in Knob Hill any longer. At a press conference on Monday, Sharon thanked the neighbors that supported her and her family, and asked them to embrace the veterans and not put all their focus on the values of their property.
Sharon spoke on behalf of her husband, who is paralyzed and unable to speak or communicate as a result of a brain injury he received in battle. He served three tours with the US Army, and following several concussions received in Iraq between 2007 and 2008, suffered a brain aneurism and a stroke.
SFC Gittens has been receiving at-home care from medical personnel, but now doctors will have to go elsewhere when the Gittens family leaves Knob Hill.
“I didn’t want to put any kind of pressure on the family to think that because we had already bought this lot, that this was the end game, that it had to be here,” says John Gonsalves, the founder of Home for Our Troops. “I couldn’t live with my own conscience if I did that … they need to feel fine with where it is that we are going to build this home.”
Gonsalves adds, “We know that this is no way is a reflection on the community of Knob Hill and the people that live in here … We do this all over the country and we know that the American people are behind it.”
Sharon, however, feels like the homeowners association was in no way in favor of the construction. The president of the Knob Hill Property Owners Association declined to attend Monday’s press conference, instead offering condolences via email.
“I think if this was important to them, at least one representative from the board would have been here today,” says Sharon.
When asked how she expects a Home for Our Troops home would improve Sean’s situation, Sharon told the organization that “the assistance of receiving a specially adapted home . . . will eliminate many of our daily challenges and give Sean the freedom to have access to his entire home [and] interact more with our family.”
Memorial Day marks a holiday when Americans recall sacrifices troops have made to keep the country free. They also are saluting those who have served and continue to serve the country during 10 years of brutal fighting in Iraq, Afghanistan, and now Libya.
Army Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Chiarelli expressed his particular concern on Sunday for the potential for mental problems related to the wars, Politico reports.
Chiarelli told CNN that 162 Army personnel out of a force of almost 750,000 have committed suicide during the past year.
Although that’s not an epidemic, “we’ve been fighting for a decade, and I don’t think we as a nation know the total effect of a decade of war,” Chiarelli said.
“I think that’s what we’re seeing . . . We just don’t know as much as we need to know about the brain and the effects that are caused in a brain for these long deployments and these repetitive deployments.”
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ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — More than 4,300 children have lost a parent in the Iraq or Afghanistan wars. Many of these kids say it’s difficult in part because they live in an area where no one else they know has lost someone in the recent wars.
Several hundred of them have gathered for Memorial Day weekend in the Washington region to share stories and offer each other support. They are attending the “good grief” camp organized by the nonprofit Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors. At the camp, they are encouraged to talk about their parent who died, but also to have fun.
Even though the experience has been difficult, many say they are now more compassionate.
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