John Feal (President and Founder)
(Senior Vice President & Secretary)
(Director of Legal Affairs)
(Director of Police Personnel & Sgt at Arms)
(Director of Medical Affairs)
Alan Forcier (Treasurer)
Dan Moynihan (Director)
|
|
|
Anne Marie BaumannEmail: Ar1cb2@aol.comAge 41, mother of two beautiful children ages 13, and 11. Married 20 years to Christopher Baumann, a NYC police officer. My husband was injured on 9/11/2001 at the World Trade Center with physical, and psychological injuries. Our lives have changed so much in the past 5 years with my husbands health just falling apart. I have taken this position as Senior Vice President for the FealGood Foundation because it is something that I believe in, and I know that there are so many of us out there still hurting from the fallout of 9/11. No one understands the impact, and what every family has gone through and still goes through every day of their lives. Its time to make a difference! It's not something that you can just get over. The FealGood Foundation will make a difference because they all care".
|
|
|
|
Email: TruBlueNY@aol.com Glen is a retired NYPD detective with 20 year of service, and also a married father of 3 children. He spent 16 years in the Emergency Services Unit (Rescue/SWAT), and served as a PBA delegate for 15 years. He also worked as a paramedic emergency room technician at North Shore University Hospital Trauma Center, and was a Lieutenant for the Rosedale Volunteer Ambulance Corp for 17 years. He is an EMT instructor, a HazMat Specialist and a Rescue Diver.
Glen responded to the WTC on the morning of 9/11/2001 as the 2nd Tower building was collapsing. As a member of the FEMA Task Force NY-1, he worked as a rescue crew at Ground Zero, digging and searching for survivors, and continued on to assist in the recovery operation thereafter. He worked over 700-800 hours at Ground Zero and witnessed the last beam removed from the site. He lost 14 friends and co-workers due to the terrorist attack.
|
|
|
Frank AndreaA partner with the Andrea & Towsky law firm located in Garden City, NY.
Villanova University - BSBA - 1978; Delaware Law School - JD - 1981; New York State Bar Association; New York State Trial Lawyers Association; American Trial Lawyers Association; Nassau County Bar Association; United States Federal Court (Southern & Eastern Districts of New York). |
|
Dan MoynihanEmail: Dan@danielmoynihan.com |
|
I knew I always wanted to be a firefighter and joined the Explorer division of the Freeport Fire Department, Freeport New York at age 14. At age 18 I joined the Marine Corps and spent the next four years with Charlie Company, 2nd Combat Engineers, 2nd Marine Division, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. I received my honorable discharge with the rank of corporal (E-4). I then returned to the Freeport Volunteer Fire Department with Engine Company 1. I had role models the likes of Richard Muldowney Jr. (L7), Dave Weiss (R1), Timmy Higgins (SOC), all of whom were friends of mine since I was 14, members of Freeport, and all of whom gave all on September 11th. On the 11th I was working in the city and believe it or not unaware of what was going on until both towers had been hit. When I found out I hopped on the N train at 59th street to get downtown, not knowing it would take an hour to do so. The trains were all emptying out at 14th street and backed up in the tunnels, creeping along at an agonizingly slow pace. When the doors finally opened at 14th streets I got above ground and across town to 7th avenue. I looked downtown past Varick Street and all I saw was smoke and dust, my view was blocked. I hopped in the back of a Verizon pick up truck with a few other guys and headed downtown. We were dropped off at Murray and West Broadway at about 10:45 am; this is when I realized the buildings had collapsed. They had both come down while I was in the subway and then while I was on the way across town. I stood there for a minute and tried to figure out who I knew who was working that day, said a quick prayer, then my mind shut down and my brain took over and I went to work. It was about 11:00 in the morning but it could have been 11:00 at night. You could see about 30 feet overhead and that was it. I remember the silence, all sound was muffled by the dust, papers were swirling all around and West Broadway was lined with cars, EMS busses, police cars and fire trucks crushed and burning. We started stretching lines down West Broadway and putting fires out and doing searches. That was how it started and we just kept going. I was lucky enough to get a dust mask and gloves, we got water wherever we could find it. I slept in offices in the American Express building a couple of nights, then a friend’s apartment in Harlem. After a while another friend’s super put me up in a vacant apartment in Chelsea. I still slept a lot at the site, St. Paul’s Chapel was an oasis for me and many people. We did find a couple of people and got them out of there, I hope they had the same luck all over the place. Later that day we had to pull back and wait for 7 WTC to collapse, which it finally did, then we went back to work. The following days were filled with a lot of hope, hoping to find people alive. The weeks that followed were filled with hope of bringing remains home to families for closure. I lost some friends and many acquaintances that day along with a lot of people. Timmy Higgins was brought home, Richie Muldowny’s remains were identified just a year ago. My final day at the sight was on the eve of Dave Weiss’s memorial. I started out with “the cough.” That is now developed a cough so bad that people stare at me on the subway, I sometimes wake up in the middle of the night from coughing so bad.. I can’t walk up stairs or go a couple of blocks without breathing so hard that I need to stop. I have asthma and see a pulmonologist on an ongoing basis. I have never been hospitalized in my life before 2007, I wound up being admitted twice, in July and September of that year. They say cluster headaches are very rare but I had two in the span of three months. They are debilitating, I was on so many pain meds I barely knew my name. After the second one I have been suffering daily chronic headaches since. My neurologist can not explain why and I am still under his care. I have other ongoing issues that I won’t even bother to go into, let’s just say I keep my doctor busy. Between my head and my lungs I am on six daily pills and two daily inhalers. I don’t have so many dreams any more but I do still have trouble sleeping and a lot of anxious nights spent awake. |