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				'Helping A Hero' Donates Homes to Wounded Soldiers
(January 27, 2009)
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								|  US Army Spc. Sergio Trejo and his family 
									stand outside their new home in Houston. The 
									Helping a Hero troop support group presented 
									the home to the family, December 2008. 
									Courtesy photo
 |  | WASHINGTON, Jan. 23, 2009 
								Army Spc. Sergio Trejo always dreamed of 
								owning his own home. 
 But after he was injured by a homemade bomb 
								during his second tour of duty in Iraq, he said 
								he felt his dream was out of reach. The 
								explosion left him with a broken back, traumatic 
								brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder.
 
 “My [Veterans Affairs] counselor was helping me 
								look for a home,” Trejo said. “It was, at times, 
								overwhelming. She told me to look into the 
								‘Helping A Hero' program and fill out the 
								application. After several weeks I finally did, 
								and today, my family and I are enjoying our new 
								home.”
 |  |  | Helping A Hero is a troop-support group dedicated to 
					providing an array of support, including financial and 
					emotional, to severely injured military personnel and their 
					families, according to the group's Web site. Its ‘Wounded 
					Hero Home' program provides specially adapted homes to 
					wounded warriors, with 11 homes donated to wounded 
					servicemembers and veterans last year, officials said. 
 Trejo, his wife, Jessica, and children, Trinity and David, 
					received the keys to their new home last month in the Delany 
					Cove community of Houston.
 
 Working in partnership with Helping a Hero, Friendswood 
					Development Company donated the home site.
 
 “We were honored to present the keys to this new home to a 
					deserving American hero and say thank you in a tangible way 
					for his valiant service to our great nation,” Meredith Iler, 
					national chairman of the Helping a Hero home program, said. 
					“This beautiful new home will enable this wounded hero to 
					build a new life.”
 
 The new home offered Trejo a fresh start since the long-term 
					effects of TBI and PTSD, accompanied by his short-term 
					memory problems, left Trejo unable to work.
 
 “If it wasn't for Helping Hero, we would probably still be 
					in an apartment,” Trejo said. “This has allowed me to focus 
					more on getting better.”
 
 By providing specially adapted homes to qualifying wounded 
					military members and veterans, Helping Hero leaders hope to 
					equip them with the foundation they need to transition 
					successfully into their local communities.
 
 “I am so proud of Sergio Trejo for his bravery in combat and 
					his courage in the rehabilitation process,” Iler said. “He 
					is a leader and an encourager to other wounded heroes who 
					have just begun their journey of recovery.”
 
 The average value of each home donated by Helping a Hero is 
					about $250,000. Iler said the current housing crisis has not 
					affected the groups' ability to secure donations and 
					volunteers.
 
 “We have been blessed to bring together patriotic Americans 
					who are builders, developers, individual and foundation 
					donors who are committed to saying ‘thank you' to our 
					wounded heroes in a tangible way,” Iler said.
 
 Trejo said he is thankful for the program.
 
 “I feel extremely blessed,” Trejo said. “Just the other 
					night, my wife and I were sitting, looking around the house, 
					still not believing it is ours. We could have never 
					purchased a house like this on our own. It's just a dream 
					come true.”
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					By Sharon FosterAmerican Forces Press Service
 Copyright 2009
 
					
					
					
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