Category Archives: General OOA Articles

Parrot Key Grill Helps OOA Recover from Arson’s Fire

From the Fort Myers Beach Periodical the Sandpiper January 2012,
Parrot Key Caribbean Grill and Big Game Waterfront Grill Give a Helping Hand to Operation Open Arms

Parrot Key Caribbean Grill and Big Game Waterfront Grill of Fort Myers Beach gave a helping hand to Operation Open Arms this week by donating $1,000 in gift cards to be used in assisting service personnel. Operation Open Arms had been storing their donated items at the Pine Island Chamber until a recent fire that completely destroyed the Chamber office.

“When we learned of the fire last week we called Captain John Bunch, the head of Operation Open Arms and offered our donation”, said Justin Hall, Operations Manager for the two restaurants. “We are proud to support Operation Open Arms and give back in to our U.S. Troops who are visiting our area. I would encourage all of the restaurants in the area to participate with us in this worthwhile endeavor!”

“Parrot Key is a great place to come and enjoy the waterfront view, have a fantastic meal and leave the real world behind for a short time! We feel honored to share a little piece of our paradise with these service personnel and their families”, says Brian DeMartinis, General Manager at Parrot Key.
Operation Open Arms, a nationally acclaimed military outreach program founded in 2005, is a network of business owners and individuals in Florida who work to provide eligible service personnel and their families with a no cost combat leave vacation. Local businesses have worked with Operation Open arms to help over 2,000 service personnel here locally and have donated the goods and services for 90 weddings. “The thing that makes Operation Open Arm such a success is a core group of 100 businesses that have joined together to support this cause and Salty Sam’s is one of our largest contributors”, said Joseph Fossella, Advisory Board Member.

Greek Fest Fort Myers Benefits Operation Open Arms

Coming in February 2012

The 37th Annual Greek Fest in Fort Myers – February 24, 25, and 26 – has chosen Operation Open Arms and the Children’s Hospital of Southwest Florida to benefit from this year’s event.

This must-do family event features:

Authentic Greek Food
• Carnival Rides & Games
• Dance Exhibitions
• Live Music by Demetrios & The Islanders
• Merchandise Vendors
• Church Tours
• Car or $25,000 Raffle
• Cash Raffle

February 24, 25 & 26, 2012. Friday-Saturday 11am-11pm and Sunday 12pm-5pm (NOTE: Sunday’s new hours!)

Admission: Adults $5 for the entire weekend. Children under 12 years old are free.

Location: Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church
8210 Cypress Lake Drive • Fort Myers, Florida 33919

Click here to visit the Official Greek Fest web site.

Congratulations to the Mr. and Mrs. Crosby – Our 92nd Wedding

Tara Woodring and Jeremy Crosby, both active duty service members, tied the knot at a sunset wedding on Pine Island at renowned Tarpon Lodge.

Its 92nd wedding, Operation Open Arms contributors gave the Crosbys a full-service wedding. “They did everything from the cake to the invitations, the lodging, the venue, everything,” says Woodring. “It was amazing.”

View the WINK News Story on the Crosby wedding here.

John Bunch, founder of Operation Open Arms, says the popularity of their free weddings has grown quickly since the first ceremony in 2005 and the ability to continue offering free weddings is in jeapordy.

According to Bunch, a ceremony and honeymoon can cost as much as $20,000, and while many local businesses donate their services, the organization’s coffers are drying up, as are the donors.

Without more help, he says, the group will soon have to decide whether to create a separate charity for weddings or stop offering the aid all together.

Click here to donate and assist Operation Open Arms‘ services to active duty service members. Click here to contribute your local services.

Display The Operation Open Arms Badge!

Help us spread the word and let your online visitors know you are making a difference for active duty service men and women at the same time. We invite you to post an Operation Open Arms Badge on your web site and link back to us.

Just right-click to download this OOA support badge and link the image to http://www.operationopenarms.org or add a text link to us on your web site anywhere you please.

Thank you for your continued support!

Operation Open Arms Provides Local Couple a Romantic Beach Wedding

Thanks to Pink Shell Resort and many other local contributors, Operation Open Arms was able to provide a local couple a free sunset wedding on Fort Myers Beach this past weekend. This celebratory event for Mr. and Mrs. Lopez was also a celebration of Operation Open Arms’ 90th free wedding.

Gabriel’s beautiful bride was working in an area Publix when she ran into Operation Open Arms founder, Captain John GiddyUp Bunch.

He gave me his card, told me to call him to get a charter fishing trip together when my boyfriend gets home from Afghanistan, instead he gave us a wedding.

View the Fox 4 News Coverage of Gabriel and Caitlyn Lopez’ wedding here.

Read the Cape Coral Breeze Article on this Fairy Tale Wedding here.

Mourning a Loss: Daniel Beougher

The family of Daniel Beougher mourns his loss during a press conference on Monday, Dec. 10. Lauren Beougher shares thoughts on the loss of her husband, Army Sgt. Daniel Beougher, who lost his life in a Dec. 8 hit-and-run accident.

Following the death of an Iraq war veteran who died in a hit-and-run crash in North Fort Myers, Captain John “GiddyUp” Bunch was determined to strengthen current state legislation, making it a misdemeanor to lend a vehicle to a person with a suspended driver license. He approached Sen. Burt Saunders, R-Naples, asking that a one-year license suspension, with the possibility of jail time, be added to the law.

Read more at NaplesNews.com.

Operation Open Arms and Pink Shell Resort Host 6 Weddings

Veteran’s Day, 11-11-11, and Six Weddings on Fort Myers Beach, Florida

Operation Open Arms and the Pink Shell Resort hosted six weddings on Veteran’s Day, November 11, 2011.  Fox 4 News reports on the joyous occasion in this video link.

 

 

Operation Open Arms – A Pine Island Treasure

This letter appeared in the Nov 1 2011 edition of the Pine Island Eagle. We whole heartily agree with Ms. Knez – Southwest Florida and Pine Island people are the lifeblood of Operation Open Arms and generously give their time and talent to our active duty service members.

To the editor:

My husband and I moved to Pine Island in August, 2010. Since then, one of the most redeeming qualities we have noticed in “islanders” is their care and concern for others in the Pine Island community. There are many benevolent organizations on the island whose members dedicate their time, money, blood, sweat and tears to those in need, and most do so on a voluntary basis. One such organization came to my attention recently through an article in The Eagle a few weeks back. It was related to a young man in the military who was assigned overseas to one of our U.S. Embassies. Although from what I can tell (researching government websites and regulations), paid home-leave provisions exist for civilian and military personnel, eligibility is related to length of service and other factors. For whatever reason, the young corporal had to pay his home-leave airfare out-of-pocket. His overall airfare cost was substantial, and pretty close to the amount he nets in a month. I was very disturbed by the fact that this young man, who guards and protects the embassy and its officials, was burdened with such expense. The organization that was soliciting donations to help offset the corporal’s travel expenses was Operation Open Arms. At the end of The Eagle article, I was surprised to see that Operation Open Arms had an address right here in my own backyard – in Saint James City.

Being a skeptic by nature, I went to the Operation Open Arms website to learn more about this organization. I learned that Operation Open Arms started with one fishing captain providing a free fishing trip to a service man who only wanted to go fishing while on combat leave. The fishing captain, John “Giddyup” Bunch, provided that fishing trip; and since 2005, from what I can tell, has done some pretty amazing things for our armed forces. According to the website, the mission of Operation Open Arms is “To provide U.S. Service men and women visiting Southwest Florida every conceivable benefit during their two week combat leave or return from a foreign duty station.” The mission is dependent upon tax deductible contributions and donations for things like free limo service, lodging, restaurants, fishing charters, golf, tennis, bowling, kayaking, biking, emergency dental care, and a cutting edge approach for the treatment of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). I also learned that Operation Open Arms has paid in full for 82 U.S. troops’ weddings, complete with limos, lodging and all the trimmings. Cost-free vacations to our lovely Southwest Florida area have been provided to over 1900 troops around the nation.

Our military men and women put their lives on the line each and every day to protect our nation and preserve our freedom. Combat takes a hefty toll on our service men and women, and to have an organization that provides a cost-free way for them to depressurize and “unwind,” is a true blessing. Operation Open Arms should be commended for the wonderful things it has done, and continues to do for our men and women in uniform. This organization only further supports my original assessment of Pine Island – a place where people care and are concerned for others. To donate or learn more about this worthy organization visit the website at: operationopenarms.org

Judy Knez

Bokeelia

Operation Open Arms Rallies Community to Cover Marine’s passage home

Please visit the Operation Open Arms Donate page to make a Credit Card or Paypal donation. Checks are also accepted – mailing address is on the Donate page. Thank you!

September 13, 2011

By DREW WINCHESTER (dwinchester@breezenewspapers.com) , Cape Coral Daily Breeze

Operation Open Arms is hoping the community will step up to help a Marine home on leave in Cape Coral.

The Marine is due to visit family in the Cape, but he had to buy his own plane ticket home from Yerervan, Armenia. The corporal is a highly decorated guard who served in Afghanistan and was one of a very few to be selected to guard the American embassy.

Operation Open Arms founder Captain John “Giddyup” Bunch said the State Department will not pay for his ticket home, so the corporal had to charge the $1,687.40 round trip ticket.

Bunch said that the twist is that the State Department will pay for the ambassador and staff, but will not pay for Marines who guard the United States against terrorism to come home while on leave.

“Here’s this kid guarding our ambassadors and staff at the embassy and they can’t pay his way home,” Bunch said.

The Pine Island fishing guide is offering to sell his own personal Marine Corp. Officer sword to help raise money to help his fellow Marine.

The sword is in mint condition, he said.

“There’s one attack after another on these embassies; don’t we owe these guys?” Bunch said. “I’m hoping our community can help resolve this.”

via Operation Open Arms seeks public’s help to cover Marine’s passage home – cape-coral-daily-breeze.com | News, sports, community info. – Cape Coral Daily Breeze.

US Marines Land on Fort Myers Beach – Operation Open Arms Sponsors Retreat

From the Fort Myers Beach Talk, July 30 2011

Operation Open Arms has done it again. Since 2005, Founder John “Giddy-Up” Bunch has enabled U.S. service men and women visiting Southwest Florida to received benefits during their combat leave or return from foreign duty.

Besides countless weddings, OOA has reached out to area businesses in Lee County and helped provide R&R to those who protect this great country of ours.

That was the case last week with three Marines who refer to each other as “life brothers” -Doug Meyer from Cape Coral, Jose Isa, who grew up in Tampa, and Mike Piro, a native of the Bronx, New York.

The three “team leaders” had just returned from eight months spent in “mud huts” where they were stationed in the “middle of nowhere” in the same platoon in Afghanistan. All three were riflemen in an infantry battalion.

Meyer was on his second tour. His first was in Iraq.

“We got helo’ed (helicopter) in, stayed in mud huts, then we moved around four times and pushed the Taliban back and out of the area and set up location from there,” he said about his recent experience overseas.

Meyer almost lost his life when Taliban forces shot at him. A bullet ricocheted off his riflescope causing cuts and bruises.

“We were fighting for about an hour that day on one of my last missions. I came around the corner with my rifle up when a bullet hit my scope. I guess it curved just enough to go right past my face. All the shrapnel from the scope peppered my face,” he said.

Luckily, Meyer was wearing protective eyewear. At first he thought he was hit in the face. When he found out he wasn’t shot, he got up and started firing again.

“It didn’t blind me, and all I had was a couple of scratches. The scope pretty much saved my life,” he said.

Meyer admitted to never having heard about Operation Open Arms before his mother told him about the organization, its founder and benefits military personnel have received while back overseas deployments.

“My mom told me that he loved the fact that we were infantry men,” said Meyer. Bunch, a professional fishing guide based out of St. James City, is a former Marine as well.

“These three kids are the real deal,” he said. “They were 75 to 100 yards away from the fighting. They are quite exceptional young men.”

Cape Coral’s Kim Meyer first heard about OOA when she was registering her son’s license at a division of the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.

“When I was renewing his tag, someone mentioned OOA does things for military personnel when they return from deployment. Shortly after I saw an article about a wedding OOA had done. So, I looked online, saw a great website with person after person relating what a great program it is, and I contacted (Bunch),” she said.

Kim said she didn’t have anything specific to set up and just relayed information about her son and his two friends. Bunch asked about their interests and recommended the Beach.

“He had a great idea and went with it,” she said. “For the past month, we have been in constant contact. He has been so supportive and so positive. It’s given me something to focus on. He’s just been great.”

That’s when OOA’s family of sponsors came to bat once again.

During their Beach hospitality, the three Marines enjoyed free resort stays. From July 24-26, they stayed at Pink Shell Resort. It was followed by three days at Silver Sands Resort.

“The Marines also enjoyed a fishing trip with Captain Kenny aboard the Sea Trek at the docks of Bonita Bill’s Waterfront Cafe on Tuesday, July 26. The inclement weather didn’t slow them down, either, as they reported to catch grouper and snapper during the trip.

“I grew up around boats, but I haven’t been fishing in a long time. It was a great time. It brought back a lot of memories,” said Doug.

After dining at LeeRoy Selmon’s Restaurant in Fort Myers earlier in the week, the Marines were treated to dinner at Matanzas Inn Restaurant and Parrot Key Caribbean Grill. They also threw out the first pitches at a ballgame as guests of the Fort Myers Miracle.

Throughout the week, Meyer was in constant communication with Bunch.

“He’ll text me and tell me, ‘this is your next mission,'” joked Meyer. “Then he’ll let us know where we should meet. He has everything planned out, and he speaks in military time.”

Bunch hopes more businesses will open up their hearts to these brave young men. While some businesses do provide a service, OOA has to chip in so that other family members can enjoy the benefits with them. It’s hard to say “no” sometimes.

“We really have to watch our pennies during these tough economic times. I hope the organization’s account doesn’t dry up,” said Bunch.

The benefits have not gone unnoticed.

“It’s so nice that they think about these men. They are really proud of our guys,” said Kim.

Now that their oversees tours are over, the three Marines will be stationed in the states. Meyer will be at Marine Base Camp LeJeune in North Carolina for training purposes to finish his military career.

“Everyone has made us feel really appreciated here,” said Doug. “It’s a great feeling to come back and know that people care and want you to relax, kick back and have a good time. We appreciate it a lot.”