OTC Volunteers give back to Special Olympics Texas,
use paint
by Mr. Michael M. Novogradac (Hood)
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Photo Credit: OTC file photo
The "before view" of the Special Olympics Texas,
Heart of Texas -- Area 12 "Killeen-Cove-Hood
Phantoms" headquarters building along Conder Street
in Killeen, Texas, needing a new coat of paint.
Twenty-one Soldier and Army Civilian Volunteers of
the U.S. Army Operational Test Command created a
"Make a Difference Day" Apr. 9 to give back to the
Killeen community.
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Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M. Novogradac (Hood)
Mission complete, the Special Olympics Texas, Heart
of Texas -- Area 12 "Killeen-Cove-Hood Phantoms"
headquarters building along Conder Street in
Killeen, Texas, stands with a new coat of paint,
courtesy of 21 Soldier and Army Civilian Volunteers
of the U.S. Army Operational Test Command. OTC
created its "Make a Difference Day" Apr. 9 to give
back to the Killeen, Texas community.
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Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M. Novogradac (Hood)
Lt. Col.
Michael C. Firmin, senior test
officer with Operational Test
Command's Maneuver Support and
Sustainment Test Directorate,
reaches for more paint in the bucket
held by Nathanial Eschmann, a Salado
High School (Salado, Texas) student
and son of Army Civilian Cheryl
Seymour, a budget analyst with OTC's
Resource Management Office. A
handful of children joined 21
Soldier and Army Civilian Volunteers
during OTC's "Make a Difference Day"
Apr. 9 to give back to the community
by painting the SOTX's "Killeen-Cove-Hood Phantoms"
headquarters building along Conder
Street in Killeen, Texas.
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Photo
Credit: Mr. Michael M. Novogradac
(Hood)
U.S. Army
Operational Test Command Soldier and
Army Civilian Volunteers stand
exhausted but happy after giving
back to the community during their
"Make a Difference Day" Apr. 9.
OTC's Volunteers painted the Special
Olympics Texas, Heart of Texas --
Area 12 "Killeen-Cove-Hood Phantoms"
headquarters building along Conder
Street in Killeen, Texas.
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Photo Credit:
Mr. Michael M.
Novogradac (Hood)
Bill Dano, a Civilian student intern
with Operational Test Command's Test
Technology Directorate, rolls paint
onto the Special Olympics Texas,
Heart of Texas -- Area 12
"Killeen-Cove-Hood Phantoms"
headquarters building along Conder
Street in Killeen, Texas. Twenty-one
Soldier and Army Civilian Volunteers
created OTC's "Make a Difference
Day" Apr. 9 to give back to the
Killeen, Texas community.
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Photo Credit:
Mr. Michael M.
Novogradac (Hood)
Capt. Marion E. Williams, an
operations officer in Operational
Test Command's Operations
Directorate, paints double-fisted
Apr. 9 at the Special Olympics
Texas, Heart of Texas -- Area 12
"Killeen-Cove-Hood Phantoms"
headquarters building along Conder
Street in Killeen, Texas. Twenty-one
Soldier and Army Civilian Volunteers
created OTC's "Make a Difference
Day" to give back to the Killeen,
Texas community.
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KILLEEN, Texas
-- Mixing 21 Soldiers and Army Civilians with 15 gallons
of paint over about five hours in 55 degree drizzly
weather became a recipe for making a difference in the
community here Saturday.
That's how volunteers from the
U.S. Army Operational Test Command at West Fort Hood,
Texas saw things when they painted the Special Olympics
Texas, Heart of Texas -- Area 12 "Killeen-Cove-Hood
Phantoms" headquarters building along Conder Street.
"The reason I'm here is, it's a
good opportunity to volunteer my time and effort toward
an organization that could use some help," said Lt. Col.
Christopher Courtland, an operational test officer with
OTC's Maneuver Test Directorate, and co-chairman for
SOTX's Area 12.
"So, we're just kind of hanging
out, painting the building; getting the things done that
need to get done that we can ... volunteering our time."
Courtland said his daughter
Kyleigh, 18, is a Special Olympics Olympian who enjoys
cycling and bowling, so she has participated with SOTX
for three years, allowing her to "better herself with
better opportunities in the sports world." Kyleigh is a
senior at Copperas Cove High School, Copperas Cove,
Texas.
Other parents, like Army Civilian
Cheryl Seymour, a budget analyst with OTC's Resource
Management Office, brought her two kids as well.
"I brought my kids to show them
that any time you have a chance, you help out others
that need help," Seymour said. "I come from a family
with eight kids and we didn't have anything. We were
poor. And, so, those people who were willing to step up
and help us when we needed help, I was very grateful
for, and I just pay it forward."
Russell P. Ansbach, a certified
Special Olympics coach and volunteer Treasurer of SOTX
-- Area 12, has worked with the organization for 30
years, and has 58 area athletes he regularly trains.
"This building has been needing a paint job for a long
time," he said. "Colonel Courtland, he took care of
getting all the supplies ... I take care of getting the
food for you guys for lunch today."
An 86-year-old Army Veteran,
Ansbach became a Soldier during July 1947, and retired
during 1967 as a Logistics Sergeant First Class.
A housing construction worker, he
was asked during 1985 to give a hand putting wood siding
on the building OTC Volunteers painted.
"Back then, I put new windows on
the building. So, it makes me feel great because I don't
have to worry about it (re-painting) anymore," he said,
thinking of the OTC Volunteers. "It's done. And once it
gets done, it's done. It used to be hard to get
volunteers. Now, we don't have to worry."
Volunteer mindsets were the same
among all OTC volunteers.
One OTC
Soldier, Master Sgt. Moussa Doukoure, is originally from
Ivory, a small
West African nation. The NCOIC of OTC's Maneuver Support
and Sustainment Test Directorate said, "Being a Soldier,
we need to be involved in our community. This country
(America) has been good to me. It has provided me lots
and lots of stuff, and I feel I have that obligation to
give some of it back to the community."
OTC is subordinate to the Army
Test and Evaluation Command at Aberdeen Proving
Ground, Maryland, and is the Army's only independent
operational tester. Testing and assessing Army, Joint,
and Multi-service warfighting systems in realistic
operational environments, OTC uses typical Soldiers to
determine whether the systems are effective, suitable,
and survivable. OTC is required by public law to test
major systems before they are fielded to its ultimate
customer -- the American Soldier.
Note from the
Special Olympics Texas (SOTX) website: Special Olympics
Texas is a privately funded non-profit organization that
changes lives through the power of sport by encouraging
and empowering people with intellectual disabilities,
promoting acceptance for all, and fostering communities
of understanding and respect. SOTX provides continuing
opportunities for more than 51,300 children and adults
with intellectual disabilities throughout the Lone Star
State to realize their potential, develop physical
fitness, demonstrate courage and experience joy and
friendship. http://www.sotx.org
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Photo Credit:
Mr. Michael M. Novogradac (Hood)
Eighty-six-year-old Russell P. Ansbach, a certified
Special Olympics coach and volunteer Treasurer of
Special Olympics Texas -- Area 12, has worked with
the organization for 30 years, and has 58 area
athletes he regularly trains. He provided lunch to
21 Operational Test Command Soldiers and Army
Civilians in exchange for their volunteer efforts in
painting the SOTX's "Killeen-Cove-Hood Phantoms"
headquarters building along Conder Street in
Killeen, Texas Apr. 9. An Army Veteran, Ansbach
became a Soldier during July 1947 and retired
during 1967 as a Logistics Sergeant First Class.
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Photo Credit:
Mr. Michael M.
Novogradac (Hood)
Lt. Col. Christopher Courtland, an operational test officer with
Operational Test Command's Maneuver
Test Directorate, and co-chairman
for Special Olympics Texas -- Area
12, stands with his daughter
Kyleigh, 18, a Special Olympics
Olympian who enjoys cycling and
bowling, outside the SOTX's
"Killeen-Cove-Hood Phantoms"
headquarters building along Conder
Street in Killeen, Texas. A senior
at Copperas Cove High School,
Copperas Cove, Texas, Kyleigh helped
her Dad and his 20 fellow Soldier
and Army Civilian Volunteers paint
the building during OTC's "Make a
Difference Day" Apr. 9.
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Source: www.army.mil,
April 9, 2016 |
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