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Firefighter Family Gets New Recycled Ride Thanks to Help the Good Guys and Hall Automotive

November, 21, 2012 -- The good folks at Hall Nissan in Virginia Beach fixed up a gently used car and were looking for a family in need around the holidays.

Jean Mahon ran into Mickey Milam, founder of Help the Good Guys, and HTGG spokesperson and former American Idol star Bucky Covington in an airport. Help the Good Guys is a charity organization that comes to the aid of first reponders in need. It was a perfect match and this week one lucky family got a recycled ride and a concert from Covington.

Article and video republished from http://www.wavy.com/dpp/hr_show/reck-on-the-road-recycled-rides

Reck on the Road: Recycled rides

Helping the Greer Family in Chattanooga - Pancake Breakfast, Concert Raise Funds

November 10, 2012 - Several hundred people spent their Saturday morning at Chattanooga Fire Station 1 to attend a pancake breakfast fundraiser for a firefighter’s sick son. While firefighters cooked up hundreds of fresh pancakes, country singer and American Idol finalist Bucky Covington entertained the crowd outside. This event helped to raise money for Senior Firefighter Jason Greer, who is struggling to pay the bills while his son Tristin gets treatment in his battle against neuroblastoma.

Emergency responders from around the area, parents and students from the Chattanooga School for the Arts and Sciences, where Tristin is a junior, and many others made donations to help support the Greer family.

This event was sponsored by the Chattanooga Firefighters Association – Local 820, and Help the Good Guys, a nonprofit organization that provides financial support for injured firefighters and their families.

For those who could not attend but would like to help, donations can be mailed to: CFFA L820, C/O Jason Greer, P.O. Box 24683, Chattanooga, Tn. 37422.

"The Leader" Online Story: Sunday Concert a Benefit for Three First Responders

the leader

TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 2012

TOP STORY >> Sunday concert a benefit for three first-responders

By RICK KRON
Leader staff writer 

Former “American Idol” finalist and up-and-coming country star Bucky Covington will headline a concert Sunday at the Electric Cowboy in Little Rock to benefit the families of three Jacksonville first responders. 

Fire Capt. Donnie Jones was killed and engineer Jason Bowmaster and police officer Daniel Dematteo were seriously injured when a car plowed into them March 19 while they were trying to rescue a woman who had driven off Hwy. 161 into a ditch. 

Bowmaster has gone through a number of surgeries. He is improving and is expected to recover, but it will take time. Dematteo is also recovering from his injuries. 

The driver, Bryce Allen, 47, has been charged in the incident. 

The concert, which also features local bands: Dr. County and the Moses Tucker Band, will start at 4 p.m. Sunday at The Electric Cowboy, off I-30, in Little Rock. 

Tickets are $10 and can be purchased at city hall, the central fire station or at www.helpthe goodguys.com, or $15 at the door. 

The Help the Good Guys group, which is dedicated to easing the burden for wounded community heroes, contacted firefighter Leo Foster about doing the concert. Foster didn’t hesitate. “It’s a good thing to do.” 

Foster worked with both firefighters. “Anyone who is a firefighter or police officer knows, in the back of their minds, that something bad can always happen. We try to prepare for it, but it’s not easy. But we have to keep on doing what we do, which is help the public,” Foster said. 

But now it’s the public’s chance to help. “We just want everyone to come out to the concert and help these heroes.” 

At Jones’ funeral two weeks ago fire chief John Vanderhoof noted, “A fire chief’s worst nightmare is the loss of a fellow firefighter who has been killed in the line of duty. He started his career with the Jacksonville Fire Department on Dec. 24, 1980. He served for 31 years of dedicated service with the Jacksonville Fire Department. He will be missed by his family as well as his firefighting family.” 

Jones was the first Jacksonville firefighter to be killed in the line of duty. 

Mickey Milam, a medically retired metro Nashville police officer, formed Help the Good Guys, which is offering the singing service of Covington. 

He says that when a firefighter or law enforcement officer is injured, the family often suffers a devastating loss of income. Many cities and communities have limited funds to cope with these situations. 

The organization raises funds through CD and merchandise sales as well as concerts. 

Artists who have worked with the organization include Ronnie Milsap, Vince Gill, George Strait and others. 

Currently, Covington has volunteered to headline shows for the group. 

“I am honored to be a part of this organization. Firefighters and police officers risk their lives to protect our families and communities…running into burning buildings, chasing down wanted fugitives…they make what I do look easy. If I can sing a few songs and raise money for a family in need, I consider it a small thing compared to what they do every year.” 

Covington’s current hit song is “I Want My Life Back.”

Birmingham Firefighter Says He Is Thankful Just To Be Alive

Published: Saturday, December 17, 2011, 7:00 AM     Updated: Saturday, December 17, 2011, 7:04 AM
 
Despite the long and painful recovery facing Brad Dean, his mother said he is simply thankful he is alive to spend Christmas with his family.

The 29-year-old Birmingham firefighter, severely burned in a Nov. 18 blaze at a vacant house, is also grateful for the support of fellow firefighters and the community that has poured in since he was hurt, his mother, Marty Dean, said.

"He says he's just thankful to be alive and able to heal. He's having to teach mama that. It's just too much for me," she said.

Because the Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service is still investigating the circumstances of the fire that injured him and two other firefighters, Brad Dean declined to comment.

However, his mother said the fire left him with burns that extended from his fingertips to his shoulders, some that burned him down to the bone.

The first news reports about the fire said only two firefighters suffered minor injuries. Birmingham fire officials said those reports were due to a miscommunication between department officials the day of the fire.

The gear her son wore told a different story, Marty Dean said.

Seams were burned away from protective gear designed to withstand 800-degree heat and holes were left in his helmet, she said.

"We don't have many catastrophic injuries like these. He was extremely lucky given the situation," said Don Baker, president of the Birmingham firefighters union. "He came as close to dying in a fire as I've seen in my 23 years" as a firefighter, he added.

'One big family'

In addition to being thankful to still be alive, Marty Dean said her son is grateful Baker and other union members have arranged a benefit scheduled for Sunday to help him, his wife Sabrina and their daughters -- Makayla, 4, and Maleah, 2.

"It's overwhelming," she said. "Firefighters are just one big family."

That extended family -- other Birmingham firefighters and the International Association of Firefighters union -- reached out to Bleve Entertainment Group, an entertainment group that helps injured firefighters and police officers facing financial difficulties.

The money will be needed as Dean continues to recover from the skin grafts he received on both arms during his 10-day stay in UAB Hospital's burn unit. Skin was taken from his left leg, from the knee to the hip, to cover the five third-degree burns he suffered.

It could be up to a year before Brad Dean can return to light duty if he doesn't have to go on disability, his mother said. The injuries also sidelined him from a second part-time job, she said.

"That's what pays for the diapers and daycare," she said of the second job.

"We're trying to keep him afloat. We want to make sure his family is taken care of," Baker said. "All firefighters work part-time jobs. We tell young guys they can't depend on that, but with the economy being what it is, a lot of them do."

Benefit concert

To help the family, Bleve and Entertainment One Music are bringing former "American Idol" contestant Bucky Covington to perform Sunday from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. at Trussville's Lightning Strikes Bowling Center to raise money for the Dean family.

Tickets are $25 to bowl and listen to Covington perform or $10 just for the performance. Children under the age of 10 can get in free.

Bleve also has a website -- helpthegoodguys.com -- where people can contribute.

Those financial hardships seem small in comparison to what Dean has faced since the Nov. 18 fire in the 700 block of 47th Street North. The fire was extensive. Firefighters pulled back once they judged the structural integrity of the house was questionable, but not before Dean was engulfed in flames.

Two other firefighters escaped with minor injuries, but Dean was trapped inside and believed he was about to die, his mother said.

"The air was twinkling with fire. He said he took a knee and kept seeing his girls' faces and asked God to get him out," she said.

Through the darkness, Dean saw a window and "decided it had to be better than where he was," his mother said.

He leapt through the window, still on fire, and landed eight feet below on his back on top of his oxygen tank, she recalled.

The day after his first graft surgery, Dean turned 29, Marty Dean said.

"This next year is going to be hard," said Marty Dean, whose husband, Ronnie Dean, is a retired Birmingham firefighter. "But the response so far has been overwhelming."

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Local Businesses Assist the Family of Fallen Firefighter Jeff Bowen

Help the Good Guys partnered with Dunkin' Donuts and Citi-Stop stores in Asheville, NC to raise $2,000 for the family of fallen firefighter Captain Jeffrey Bown. 

Captain Bowen perished on July 28, 2011 while checking to see if anyone was left in a burning medical building. He is survived by his wife and three children. The money raised through CD sales at Asheville area stores helped his family cover immediate expenses following his death.

Thank you to Dunkin' Donuts and Citi-Stop stores for supporting your community.


Read more here:

News Radio 570 AM: Fatal Biltmore Ave Fire Ruled Arson

Citizen Times: City of Asheville Statement

Community Support in Atlanta Saves Police Officer's Home

Former Fulton County Police Officer Paul Phillips and his wife Stephanie were in danger of losing their home in Buford, Georgia. Phillips hasn't worked since he was shot and injured three years ago while saving the life of a woman who was being held at gunpoint.

Eight surgeries later, Phillips' hand will never fully heal, and doctors say he will never be able to work as a police officer again. Like most police officers, Phillips worked extra off-duty jobs to provide for his family. During his recovery, Phillips' wife Stephanie lost her job, as well. Now the family hasn't been able to keep up with mortgage payments living just on Phillips pension.

But members of their community got together and raised enough money to keep them going, less than a month before their home was set to go into foreclosure.

One organization is especially sensitive to the difficulties that injured police officers face. Help the Good Guys, founded by injured-on-duty/medically retired Nashville police officer Mickey Milam, often steps in to help in cases like these.

Help the Good Guys donated country music CDs that were sold in local businesses, raising $5,000 for the Phillips’ family.

Milam states, “When FOP President Howard Billingsley contacted us about Paul, I knew we had to help. This is exactly the kind of situation that Help the Good Guys was created for.”

The Phillips family called the outpouring of help amazing.

 

Read more here:

FOX 5: Injured Ex-Fulton Cop May Lose Home

AJC News: Hero Cop Can't Work, About to Lose Home


Team Fever and Help the Good Guys Raise Money for Fallen Alabama Officer's Family

On December 3, 2009, Pelham, Alabama Police Officer Philip Davis was shot and killed during a routine traffic stop on I-65 near Birmingham.

CDs donated by Help the Good Guys were sold in Team Fever stories in the Pelham area, raising $2000 for immediate expenses for Officer Davis's wife and two children. Thank you to Team Fever for supporting your community!

BLEVE Records Raises $15,000 to Help Families of Officers Slain in Washington Coffeehouse

THE FOP Journal - Feb 2010

BLEVE Records Raises $15,000 to Help Families of Officers Slain in Washington Coffeehouse

Link to article:  http://www.fop.net/publications/journal/Journal2010_02.pdf

On November 29, 2009,  a lone gunman entered  a coffeeshop in Parkland WA and gunned down four Lakewood police officers who had met there prior to reporting for duty. Although that gunman was later tracked down and killed in a shootout, the devastation his cold blooded murders has left for the families and colleagues of the four fallen officers will take a long time to overcome. 

In an effort to respond in some way to this tragedy, BLEVE Records donated 1000 copies of their new CD release “My First Ride” to raise money for the fallen Lakewood police officers’ families.The CDs were sold in Forza Coffee Company houses located mainly in Washington State. The Forza Coffee Company in Parkland was the site of the brutal slaying. According to Brian Wurts, President of the Lakewood Police Independent Guild, the CDs sold out within days, raising a total of $15,000 that will be donated to the families of the fallen officers.

The four officers leave behind a total of nine children.  BLEVE President Mickey Milam says, “This was such a tragic and senseless act of violence. My heart goes out to the families of these four brave officers. Police officers spend their lives protecting and serving others. It has always been BLEVE’s goal to help police officers, firefighters and their families in times of disaster and I can think of no greater disaster than the sudden loss of a loved one.”

 BLEVE Records is endorsed by the Fraternal Order of Police and the International  Association of Firefighters.