by Airman 1st Class Lauren Pitts
Minot Air Force Base Public Affairs
7/23/2014 - VELVA, N.D. - -- When
the Souris River flooded in 2011, thousands of people from the Minot
community were washed out of their homes and Airmen from Minot Air Force
Base, N.D., worked with the people of Minot to repair damages. Through
their hard work they put Team Minot and the local community back on its
feet.
Now three years after the flood, Minot continues to thrive, but some
still struggle in the aftermath of the disaster and again turn to
Minot's Airmen for help.
"I built my home in Minot from the ground up," said Gary Ellingson,
Vietnam War veteran and Minot native. "A little bit at a time over the
years, and then the flood came."
Ellingson lost his home and most of his possessions in the flood,
forcing him to begin his life over again. With injuries sustained from
his time in the military, Ellingson couldn't manage the labor of
renovating a whole house alone. However, through his volunteer work with
the Red Cross, Ellingson got in touch with the right kind of man power
to help with his project.
Senior Master Sgt. Jeffery Sipos, Superintendent of the 5th Civil
Engineer Squadron on Minot AFB, was contacted through the Red Cross to
assist Ellingson. He said it didn't take much to get other Airmen on
board as well.
"We jumped on this opportunity to help," said Sipos. "Especially being
civil engineers, we felt like we had the right skills to make sure it
got done right."
With a team of volunteers consisting of Airmen throughout the ranks,
Sipos and his wingmen dedicated their Saturday to working on Ellingson's
Velva, N.D., home.
Ellingson has spent most of his time there removing what the previous
owners had left behind, leaving little time for him to focus on actual
renovations. That is where the 5th CES Airmen jumped in.
"We're looking to install a whole kitchen full of cabinets and taking
out five trees that have their roots breaking into the foundation,"
Sipos said. "It's a lot of work, but we'll get it done."
Although Ellingson said he never planned on having to start another home, he is glad to have help from the Airmen.
"I am grateful and then some," Ellingson said. "It was amazing and a blessing to receive this kind of help."
Sipos views the project as doing something good for good people, which he feels is what Minot Airmen are all about.
"As Airmen, it's kind of in our culture to volunteer," said Sipos. "But
when it's an opportunity to help our prior military, it's more like
helping family."
Thursday, July 24, 2014
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