Santa Fe College Supports the Troops
Operation CarePak
Many colleges and universities across the United States have lost students called up for military service in Iraq or Afghanistan, and Santa Fe College (SFC) is no exception. In April of 2003, Sgt. John Travis Rivero was killed at the age of 23 in a Humvee accident in the Iraqi desert. Three months later, Sgt. Jeffrey Mattison Wershow was killed at age 22 in a terrorist attack while providing security for American educators visiting Baghdad University.
Both former Santa Fe students were from Gainesville, Florida, and both served in the 2nd Battalion, 124th Infantry Regiment of the Florida Army National Guard. This past March, that same battalion was redeployed for a second tour of duty in Kuwait and Iraq.
In response, Operation CarePak, a project to support the 2nd/124th
soldiers with gifts from home and to honor the students who died in 2003, has
won overwhelming support not only from the Santa Fe College community but also
from the greater North Central Florida area. “The redeployed soldiers are the
sons and daughters of our friends, neighbors, and co-workers,” said Anne Marie
Mattison, the mother of Jeffrey Wershow and a part-time student advisor at
Santa Fe. “They are college students, cable guys, elected officials, career
National Guard soldiers, school teachers—you name it, they are there.” When a favorite local barbeque restaurant heard of the
project, they donated 1,000 packets of their sauce, an “awesome contribution,”
according to Major Blake Glass, a local liaison for the soldiers. A wholesale
sock company donated enough white athletic socks to ensure that each of the 601
soldiers from Gainesville had a pair. And a local peanut farmer donated enough
bags of roasted peanuts to satisfy the soldiers’ desire for this favorite snack
from home. In short, the response has been overwhelming. While the
goal for the month of May was to send 15 large boxes overseas, there were
enough supplies for 55 boxes! “It gives us a head start on next month,” said
Mattison, “and we’ll be right there with them until they come home.” Santa Fe President Jackson Sasser also gave his strong
support to the project. “These heroes believe in this country, our way of life,
our laws and values. They believe in us. The least we can do is send our
support to show that we believe in them and we honor their service.” The
project has also gained the support of members of the SFC Senate, SFC Student
Senate, Career Service employees, the SFC chapter of the Florida Association of
Community Colleges, and the SFC family at large, Mattison said. One local high
school and many members have also reached out to get involved.
Using a network of collection boxes positioned throughout
the Santa Fe campus and the community, students, faculty, staff, and area
residents donated an enormous variety of supplies: personal care items,
nonperishable foods and snacks, over-the-counter medicines, books, magazines,
games, DVDs, and phone cards, to name just a few.

