By Samantha L.
Quigley/AFPS
Pictures by Karen Grimord
WASHINGTON, Dec.
13, 2006 - After
a holiday tour of the White House, participants in today’s
America Supports You Community Group Summit met at the
Pentagon for a welcome from the program’s architect, a
look at the past year, and a glimpse into the America
Supports You program’s future.
America Supports You is a Defense
Department program launched in 2004 that spotlights and
facilitates support for the nation’s servicemembers from
the American public and the corporate sector.
“It’s great to have you here today on our
second
annual America Supports
You Summit at the
Pentagon,”
Allison Barber,
deputy secretary of defense for internal communication
and public
liaison, told the group representing more than 80 America
Supports You grassroots organizations.
“Through
(America Supports You) and your partnership in this
program, we have real ways to make sure that the troops
always know – and their families always know – politics is
one debate and one discussion,” she added. “But on the
people side of that discussion, there’s only one message,
and that’s that the American people support our troops.”
Barber
commended all of the nearly 250 America Supports
You members for their accomplishments this year. A
combined total of more than 6 million care packages and
letters have been sent to the troops. Groups have raised
nearly $3.5 million in financial support for servicemembers and their families and have renovated more
than two dozen homes for wounded servicemembers.
This is in addition to organizing and participating in
Freedom Walks in all 50 states to commemorate 9/11 and
honor the nation’s servicemembers, both past and present.

“Don’t ever slow down,” Barber encouraged the groups.
“That’s the beauty of you.
You’re agile. You’re effective.
You move the needle.”
The group got a glimpse at some of the different avenues
America Supports You will take in the new year.
The program plans to bring Capitol Hill into the mix in
2007, Barber said.
“The Department of Defense’s strategy, on purpose, has
been not to really
be involved on the Hill in the first
two years, … because we wanted people to know that America
Supports You is not political,” she said. “In 2007, now we
will reach out to the Hill and start an America Supports
You caucus so that some of the issues that are concerns
for you and your states and across the country will be
able to bubble up with Congress.”
Of particular interest for 2007 is the New Year’s
resolution America
Supports You is encouraging its
corporate members to make: “Adopt an America Supports You
Grassroots Organization Today!”
Some -- like Jeanette Cram, founder of an organization
called “Treat the Troops,” already have realized the
benefit of partnering with an America Supports You
corporate team member. Cram said a partnership
between
her organization and DuPont Teflon will help with her
biggest challenge in getting fresh, homemade cookies to
troops overseas: postage.
“America Supports You … got me hooked up with the right
people,” Cram said. “Treat the Troops is not a big,
powerful organization; there’s not a whole lot of us.
(But) to be recognized by America Supports You and DuPont,
that lends a lot of credibility to us.”
Cram said she hopes the summit would be an opportunity for
her to meet and network with some of the other groups
attending.
This was the second summit for teenager Brittany Bergquist
of Norwell, Mass., and she agreed it’s a great way to meet
people and develop new connections with groups that can
either lend a hand or need a hand.

“We
had such a great time last year and were able to meet so
many great
people who we thought it would be a really good idea to
come back and try to network a little more,” said
Brittany, who co-founded Cell Phones for Soldiers with her
brother, Robbie, in April 2004. “There definitely are a
lot of new faces that we don’t recognize from last year,
so it’s nice to meet new people.”
The morning concluded with a briefing on the global war on
terrorism by Air Force Brig. Gen. Mark O. Schissler and a
discussion with Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld. Both
offered the group a chance to ask any questions they had.
Rumsfeld fielded a question that drew loud applause
regarding how to go about changing the law to allow for
reduced postage for groups shipping package overseas. The
answer perhaps wasn’t what the group had hoped for, but it
drew some chuckles. “Get your congressmen and senators to
change the law,” Rumsfeld answered.
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