Browsing Tag

Benefits

News, People

Pitch In!

Baseball season is just around the corner. Before you trade in that old glove, think about donating it so children in the US and around the world who can’t afford equipment can take their bases in style.

The McCollum Insurance Agency, 4109 Main Street, in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia, is collecting new and gently used youth baseball/softball gloves and new baseballs and softballs for Pitch In for Baseball (PIB), a nonprofit organization based in Harleysville founded by David Rhode, a businessman and avid sports coach. Some well known local folks serve on its board, among them Bill Piszek, vice president of the Copernicus Society founded by his late father, Ed Piszek, founder of Mrs. Paul’s Foods, and Bradley Korman, co-president of Korman Communities, Inc.

This past year, Pitch in for Baseball teamed with major league baseball to distribute equipment to more than 175 inner city baseball leagues in the US. PIB has sent gear to an orphanage in the Dominican Republic, a youth organization in Slovenia, and, thanks to a group of US soldiers in Iraq, to a new baseball team in Bagdad. In Philly, the group was able to help the Nelson Playground to increase the number of participants in its ball programs from 60 to 300 because of the donated equipment.

McCollum came across PIB while looking for an organization that needed sports equipment. “From day one when I started my business, I wanted to do something to help out the community,” he says. “There are drives for food and for clothing, and I wanted to try something different. And there they were on Google.”

Ideally, McCollum says, he’d love the equipment he collects to go to kids in Philly. “I really wanted to help out locally,” he says. And he was happy to see that the city’s parks department is a regular recipient of PIB’s largesse.

McCollum will be collecting baseball gear through March 15 at his Manayunk office. You can contact him at b.mccollum@verizon.net or 215-508-9000.

News

Learn How You Can Help Haiti

Roosevelt and Deirdre Maitre. Photo by Joy Moody.

Roosevelt and Deirdre Maitre. Photo by Joy Moody.

Philadelphia filmmaker Deirdre (Dede) Maitre, the granddaughter of Irish immigrants, will screen clips from the documentary work she has done over the years in Haiti on Friday night, January 29, at the Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, in the Mt. Airy section of Phladelphia.

Representatives from various Haitian aid groups will also be there to answer questions about the earthquake that has left an estimate 200,000 people dead and millions more homeless and without food, water, and medical care.

Maitre, who received her MFA from Temple University in 2005, has been the recipient of many grants and awards, including the Ben Lazaroff Writing Scholarship, a Philadelphia Independent Film and Video Association Subsidy Grant, and a Thesis project Completion Grant from the University Fellowship Committee of the Graduate Board of Temple University. Her husband, Roosevelt, was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

She runs her own company, Maytree Multimedia, which provides digital video services to small organizations and businesses, and she freelances on independent film projects. Her own current project is “Is God Sleeping?”—a short documentary about a young Haitian painter struggling as an illegal immigrant in the United States. She recently completed a photoessay, Permission, which features personal portraits of the residents of Saint Marie, Port-au-Prince, Haiti. You can see some of her work on her website.

Irish charities, particularly Concern Worldwide, were on the ground in Haiti when the quake struck. Concern, founded in Ireland in 1968, has had a team in three areas of Haiti–La Gonave Central Plateau, and Port-au-Prince–since Hurricane Gordon hit the islands in 1994. The Irish American nonprofit, GOAL, USA, founded in Dublin in 1977, is also there. You can donate to Concern at www.concernUSA.org/HaitiAppeal and to Goal USA at www.goalusa.org.

People

At Christmas, He’s Helping Spread the Warmth

Two years ago, Mike Sheridan of Drexel Hill was in Boston on a job, painting the outside of a Holiday Inn, when the unthinkable happened. It was the end of the day, he was cleaning up and took a step backwards and found himself hurtling through the air into an empty swimming pool.

Sheridan remembers the fall. He clearly remembers trying to move his body so he wouldn’t land on his head. “I wanted to land on my feet,” he says. Instead, he landed on his back, sustaining the descriptively named burst fracture of his L3 vertebrae. His back bone literally exploded, shooting shards of bone into his spinal column.

After the impact, he lay motionless, his mind probing the sensations—or lack of them—in his legs. “I couldn’t move,” he says. “I couldn’t feel my legs.” His brother jumped into the pool after him. “ I asked him to move my legs for me and he said he was already moving them. But I couldn’t feel it.”

Doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital operated several days later—making no promises that Sheridan would ever walk again. But the operation was successful. The removed the bone fragments from his spinal column, shored up his back with titanium rods and sent him home, after a stint in rehab. He still has no feeling in his left leg and, except for that leg, he’s in constant pain.

But Mike Sheridan isn’t telling his story for sympathy. He doesn’t think he needs any. “I consider myself lucky,” he says. “People have been really good to me over these past two years.”

He’s recounting it to explain why, this year, he has the time to travel all over Delaware County collecting coats for the needy. “I have all the time in the world now,” he says. “I haven’t been able to work since I was injured. I just wanted to spend my time doing something good.”

So he launched “Mike Sheridan’s Winter Warm Up,” a campaign to collect new and gently used coats for the homeless and the people who have fallen down on their luck in what seem like luckless times. “I’ve thought about doing this before, but his year with way the economy is, I know people don’t have a whole lot of money and one thing that really hurts is the cold,” he says.

It was a seed sown many years ago when Sheridan was a child. A sixth grader like himself, a kid named Trevor Ferrell, came to his school to talk about how he went out one “code blue” night in Philadelphia to give a blanket to a homeless person and began a campaign that eventually became a multimillion dollar nonprofit. Along with food and warm clothing, Trevor’s Campaign provides transitional housing for the homeless in the city and through 19 affiliate chapters across the country.

If you’re from Philadelphia, you may remember Trevor’s Campaign and Trevor’s Place. Mike Sheridan never forgot it.

And he’s discovered, as Trevor Ferrell did, that some seeds that are sown, spread. Mike Sheridan’s Winter Warm Up has quickly gone “viral.”

“I posted it on Facebook and it started to spread by word of mouth,” he explains. “Some people said they’d put bins in their offices. We started out with bins at Brian McCollum’s Insurance Agency, Maggie O’Neill’s pub and Main Line Sound and Video. Friends are calling their friends. Everyone’s getting involved. One friend decided to put up a bin and sign at the Marple Recreation Center. Another put a bin in the Aston police station. The owner of Kid to Kid consignment shop donated five trash bags of kids jackets alone. I’m afraid I’m going to get overloaded, but that’s a good thing.”

Right now, he has about 75 coats, some stored in his garage, some at friends’ houses. He’s planning to distribute them by January 12, some to teacher friends who told him about the many kids who come to school coatless because their parents are too poor to afford them, others to an agency like Philadelphia Cares, a clearinghouse for volunteers all over the region. “We haven’t contacted them yet because we wanted to see how it went and I’m really glad to see how it’s taken off,” he says.

Mike Sheridan’s future is uncertain. He’s had two careers. A graduate of the Restaurant School, he’s worked as a pastry chef. He’s been a painter. But his injuries make it impossible for him to stand for long periods and he can’t lift anything over 30 pounds.

But if there’s one thing he does know, it’s what he’s going to be doing next year at this time. Collecting coats. “It’s a way to help,” he says. “You can’t put oil in everyone’s house, but you can give them a jacket. It’s a small thing, but it’s the small things that help out.”

Help Mike spread the warmth. Donate new and used coats for men, women, and children at any of these locations:

McCollum Insurance Agency in Manayunk
4109 Main Street
Philadelphia PA 19127

Maggie O’Neills Pub
1062 Pontiac Road
Drexel Hill, PA 19026

Main Line Sound and Video
503 West Lancaster Avenue
Wayne, PA 19087

Marple Newtown Recreation Center
20 Media Line Road
Newtown Square, PA 19073

Aston Township Police Department
5021 Pennell Road
Aston, PA 19014

If you need a pick-up, email Mike at sheridanswinterwarmup@yahoo.com.

News

Help Save the Parade

Until a couple of weeks ago, the only communication the city of Philadelphia received urging the city to financially support the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade and other ethnic parades in the city came from the organizers themselves.

That’s not enough, says St. Patrick’s Day Parade Director Michael Bradley, who will be testifying before City Council on December 8 along with members of Ethnic Americans United, the new group comprising representatives of all the ethnic parades that march the streets of Philadelphia every year.

So this week, on the heels of the city’s loss of the Dad Vail Regatta after more than 50 years because of money woes, he emailed 25,000 people, including all the major Irish organization in and around the city, asking them to contact the mayor and city council members. Here’s the text of his message:

“Please contact Philadelphia City Council and Mayor Nutter and tell them we need funding for our Irish Parade on March 14, 2010 or it will go the way of the other lost events and revenue in Philadelphia.

“We have been marching since 1771. Do they want to be the ones responsible for the worldwide negative publicity this will create if we don’t reach some kind of SHARING of costs? We are not asking for it all!

“Please be respectful and positive, but strong and effective with your comments. Please contact each member of City Council, you can copy all of them in your “EMAIL TO:” line and send one email to all at once and I will have a copy for our records . This must be done before December 5th as I have to testify on our behalf on December 8th in front of City Council:

anna.verna@phila.gov; bill.green@phila.gov; blondell.reynolds.brown@phila.gov; brian.o’neill@phila.gov; curtis.jones@phila.gov; darrell.clarke@phila.gov; donna.miller@phila.gov; frank.dicicco@phila.gov; frank.rizzo@phila.gov; jack.kelly@phila.gov; james.kenney@phila.gov; jannie.l.blackwell@phila.gov; joan.krajewski@phila.gov; maria.q.sanchez@phila.gov; marian.tasco@phila.gov; william.greenlee@phila.gov; wilson.goode@phila.gov; Michael.nutter@phila.gov; info@philadelphiastpatsparade.com

Music, News

Irish Music for a Sacred Cause

Robbie O'Connell and Mick Moloney.

Robbie O'Connell and Mick Moloney.

Father John McNamee, the former pastor of St. Malachy Church, looked out onto the audience gathered for Sunday’s annual Irish music concert with Mick Moloney and friends, and marveled at how the tradition has helped keep the parish school open and thriving.

“The only way we can keep this school open,” he said, “is through our own effort. Thanks to you, we cost the archdiocese nothing.”

Keeping the school in business is a costly proposition, but it apparently pays big dividends to the kids who attend. Roughly 50 percent of students attending city public schools drop out before they finish high school—but St. Malachy’s kids determinedly swim against that discouraging tide. Ninety-five percent of the school’s students finish high school, Father Mac said.

Thanks to Mick Moloney and a small group of immensely talented fellow musicians—including fiddler Dana Lyn, uilleann piper Jerry Sullivan, accordion player Billy McComiskey, and singer Robbie O’Connell—the school acquired a healthy infusion of cash from the fans who nearly filled all the pews. It’s a tradition Moloney has carried on for over two decades. “Here it is 25 years, and here it is Mick’s still coming,” said Father Mac.

We have photos from the concert, and several videos. Check them out.

The videos: 

Mick Moloney and Friends Play a Medley of Reavy Tunes
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/mickreavey

The Emigrant and Lough Derg
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/sullivanjigs

Yesterday’s Men
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/yesterdaysmen

The First Half Closer
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/firsthalf

An O’Carolan Tune
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/mickocarolan

The House In The Glen/The Bohola Jig/Josie McDermott’s/Free And Easy
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/mickopeningset

News, People

Help Two Children in Need

They’re a family descended from Irish coal miners from Schuylkill County. They’re made of sturdy stock.

Still, few would debate this point: Mary Ann Chestnut’s son Matthew and his wife Rachel have encountered more hardship than most.

Mary Ann, of Narberth, tells the story of her grandchildren Shelby and Benjamin. They’re two of four children born to Rachel and Matthew. (Their two other kids are Patrick, 9, and Jordan Amanda, 6 months.)

Four years ago, when Shelby was 3, she was diagnosed with cerebral palsy. It wasn’t a quick or easy diagnosis.

Matthew and Rachel were still living in the Philadelphia area when they noticed something peculiar about Shelby’s gait. Her heels turned in, in a way that they clicked together.

“She was perfectly gorgeous and she crawled like a little demon,” says Mary Ann. “I’m a pediatric nurse, and nobody would have picked up anything on her. The only thing we might have seen, in retrospect, was that she was a very quiet baby. When she went to walk, her feet were turned in, and they (her parents and doctors) thought it was some sort of orthopedic issue. They were looking at something correctable.”

Later, the family moved to Portland, Oregon, and continued seeking care for Shelby at the local Shriner’s Hospital. Doctors there offered the same diagnosis: An orthopedic problem. ”But with each passing month it got worse,” says Mary Ann. “Then she started into muscle contractures. It took some time to develop.” Ultimately, Shelby was diagnosed with a very severe form of cerebral palsy.

Today, this bright little girl is in second grade, sharp as a tack, and a whiz at the video game Wii, which they also use for therapy at Shriner’s. She can lift her arms from the wrists, but otherwise she is confined to a wheelchair. She can’t talk; instead she uses sign. From time to time, she requires surgery to relieve the contractures. She also takes Botox to prevent the muscle spasms.

All of that was hard enough.

Then along came Benjamin—like his sister, an active little person, full of personality.

“He was born perfectly healthy and then, at 3, he had a cold for about a week, just like any child,” says Mary Ann. Then he spiked a pretty bad fever with it, and he seemed a little wobbly. My son took him to the hospital emergency room. The ER doctors took an X-ray and said he was constipated. He was, but that was a symptom of his illness. They sent him home with cold and constipation and said let it run its course.

“One day, Benjamin just dropped to the ground and stopped walking,” says Mary Ann. “This was about a week after he was in the hospital, and they rushed him back. At first they didn’t know what it was. He was in pediatric ICU for two weeks. Ultimately, they gave him prednisone, but by then it was too late: He was already unable to move his legs at all.”

The diagnosis: a rare disease called transverse myelitis, caused by an inflammation of the spinal cord. Benjamin, now 5, can now crawl, but he’ll never walk. He can’t speak.

Like his sister, Mary Ann says, Benjamin is bright—so bright that in his special ed program, they put him into a regular kindergarten class. Though he can’t talk, he can sign. He has his own personal assistant with him. We’re hoping that (being in a mainstream class) will help bring back those language skills.”

Matthew and Rachel are far from rich, Mary Ann says. So in a country where the definition of catastrophic illness coverage is a big mayonnaise jar with a coin slot next to the pizza parlor cash register, there’s little choice but to look for help wherever they can get it.

This Saturday, you can help.

The Second Annual Shelby and Benjamin Chestnut Fundraising Party will be held all day at the American Legion Hall, 80 Windsor Avenue, in Narberth. From noon to 4, you can attend a luncheon and an auction. Prizes include vacations, original artwork, sports tickets, gift baskets, gift certificates, and autographed books by St. Malachy Church’s well-known former pastor, Father John McNamee—Mary Ann’s cousin through the Garvey family.

And/or: From 6 to 11 p.m. dance until you drop. The night includes great food, beverages and terrific music.

The minimum donation is $25 for each event. Proceeds will go to help purchase a wheelchair van for the family.

Long term, Mary Ann dreams of something bigger. “Our ultimate goal is to hopefully create a foundation, for families who have children with multiple disabilities. Having one child with a disability would be hard, but there are quite a few families with two disabled children, or more.”

If you can’t make the Legion Hall festivities, you can still offer a helping hand. Send a donation to:

The Shelby and Benjamin Trust

In Care of:

The Chestnuts
102 Elmwood Avenue
Narberth, PA 19072
(610) 667-4582

or

The Beneficial Bank
Attn: Regina
901 Montgomery Avenue
Narberth, PA 19072

News

An Evening of Music and Dancing

Maired Timoney Wink is enjoying this dance.

Maired Timoney Wink is enjoying this dance.

There ought to be a bumper sticker that says, “Irish Dancers Have More Fun Than You,” because it sure seems that way.

At Sunday’s benefit for the WTMR 800AM Irish radio shows, the dancers turned out in force, and if there had been a rug to cut, they would have shredded it like roast pork.

The money from the benefit will help radio hosts Vince Gallagher, president of the Commodore Barry Club where the event was held, and longtime dancer Marianne MacDonald raise the $36,000  they need to keep the shows on the air.  

News, People

Remembering Sean Cullen

Sean Cullen was a union steamfitter by trade, but to his many friends in the Far Northeast, he was a man of many talents and wide-ranging interests.

Cullen, a member of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Division 88, died May 22 in an accident on his beloved Harley motorcycle on Knights Road, in front of Frankford Torresdale Hospital. He was 36. He leaves behind a wife, Alicia—he met her at Archbishop Ryan—and a 7-year-old son, Ryan.

According to 88’s Paddy O’Brien, who knew Sean for close to eight years, his death leaves a big hole in the community.

“I knew Sean as a member of Division 88,” he says. “A lot of the other guys knew him longer; they knew him from the neighborhood. Sean ended up being our go-to guy. If somebody needed something they’d say, ‘Call Sean.’ He was our handy man. He’d load up that little red truck of his with tools, he’d come to your house. We built people’s rec rooms…we did all kinds of stuff. Sean was the leader of all that.”

Sean Cullen was a guy who could have done many things with hs life, O’Brien added. For example, he could just as easily have been a Philadelphia police officer. His parents, Bert and Mary Cullen, were retired police officers, and his brother Jimmy is a narcotics officer. Sean took the department test, but, as O’Brien recalls, the steamfitters union called first.

Friends recall Cullen as a man who wouldn’t say no. No one was surprised when he became athletic director for Calvary A.A., and recently its lacrosse coach,even though there wasn’t much in the way of participatory sports in his background.

“We used to say that he was the most unathletic athletic director in the history of sports,” O’Brien laughs. “He never played anything himself. He ended up as one of those people who learned the games and learned to coach. He’d ever picked up a lacrosse ball in his life. He’d just find out what it took. he spent his own money to go to classes to learn about lacrosse, just to teach the kids.”

Sean Cullen clearly left his mark on the community. Over 1,000 mourners came to his funeral at Our Lady of Calvary Church.

Friends and family are honoring Sean’s memory by establishing a trust fund to assist in Ryan Cullen’s education.

On Saturday August 29, Quaker City Yacht Club, 7101 N. Delaware Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa 19135 will host a fund-raising event from 12-5 p.m. The cost of the event is $30 and includes domestic draft, wine, soda and food. Entertainment will be provided by popular local band The Cram and DJ Tommy Kuhn.

Three Monkeys co-owner Gavin Wolfe has partnered with the generosity of Muller Beverage and the Philadelphia Credit Union to sponsor the event. All proceeds will go directly to the family.

The second event, on Sunday October 4 from 12-4 p.m. will be hosted by Joe Santucci at his Woodhaven Road location. There will be an outdoor tent available in case of inclement weather. The $25 event donation includes domestic draft, wine, soda and food samplings of Joe’s original Best of Philly menu items. Again, all proceeds will directly benefit the family. There will also be live entertainment and a DJ.