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The town of Mocksville raced into the Christmas season with the 5th Annual “Twas the Night Before” Bed Race, and Trailers of the East Coast was well represented, sponsoring two of the 20 race teams who made the mad dash down Main Street.
U.S. Army Cpl. Michael A. Soto, 1st Squadron, 102nd Cavalry, New Jersey Army National Guard, poses for a photo with his family after the Headquarters Troop, and Alpha and Bravo Troops farewell ceremony at the armory in Westfield, N.J., Jan. 21, 2019. The three units are deploying to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan in support of Operation Spartan Shield. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)
Wyoming National Guard soldiers responded to a Feb. 11 request from the governor and Wyoming Homeland Security to mitigate ice-jam induced flooding in Worland and surrounding areas. By Saturday morning, upwards of 50 Guardsmen were working to reinforce berms along the Big Horn River between two overpasses and critical infrastructure near downtown with sandbag-fortified concrete barriers. By Sunday afternoon, with the addition of another 20-man rapid action team (RAT), and as hundreds of community members helped fill sandbags, Guard crews were moving four truckloads of about 200 sandbags an hour out to the berms. Monday, it was determined to dispatch another 20 person RAT team to Worland to help in further operations with sandbags and berms. By 16 Feb., RATs had finished operations in Worland, and Manderson and moved up to Greybull, which is currently under a flood warning. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
U.S. Army Soldiers with the 2nd Battalion, 113th Infantry Regiment, New Jersey Army National Guard, render honors during the singing of the national anthem at the welcome home ceremony for the 268 New Jersey Army National Guard Soldiers at the National Guard Armory in Teaneck, N.J., Nov. 30, 2019. The Soldiers conducted a variety of missions, including base security, aircraft security, emergency response, intelligence collection, and security force assistance across a broad area of eastern Africa in support of Operation Enduring Freedom - Horn of Africa. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)
PSEG Long Island employees participate in all aspects of this volunteer effort, Angel Tree" - after buying gifts for more than 100 Angel Tree children, our employees spend a few days sorting the gifts at the Salvation Army's Riverhead office, then we help distribute them to families for their young loved ones.
Wyoming National Guard soldiers responded to a Feb. 11 request from the governor and Wyoming Homeland Security to mitigate ice-jam induced flooding in Worland and surrounding areas. By Saturday morning, upwards of 50 Guardsmen were working to reinforce berms along the Big Horn River between two overpasses and critical infrastructure near downtown with sandbag-fortified concrete barriers. By Sunday afternoon, with the addition of another 20-man rapid action team (RAT), and as hundreds of community members helped fill sandbags, Guard crews were moving four truckloads of about 200 sandbags an hour out to the berms. Monday, it was determined to dispatch another 20 person RAT team to Worland to help in further operations with sandbags and berms. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
The town of Mocksville raced into the Christmas season with the 5th Annual “Twas the Night Before” Bed Race, and Trailers of the East Coast was well represented, sponsoring two of the 20 race teams who made the mad dash down Main Street.
YUMA, Ariz. – Yuma Free Clinic hosted its first Yuma Free Cup fundraiser at Gila Ridge High School June 22, 2013. The event pitted the Yuma All Star Spartans F.C., a mix of local high school athletes, against the Mexican 17U National Team. Hundreds of soccer fans from across the area attended the event. The Mexican 17U National team defeated the Yuma All Star Spartans 10 -1. Proceeds from the fundraiser will benefit Yuma Free Clinic and enable the nonprofit to continue its mission of making free medical care available for low-income families that qualify. See Yuma Free Clinic for more information. -- Photograph by Keith "The Bull" Stevenson © Nonprofit Media Production 2013 All rights reserved
Cpl. Alec Porter, a human resources specialist assigned to the Wyoming Army National Guard shovels hail and debris outside a church in Pine Bluffs, Wyoming July 28, 2016. A day after a hail storm uprooted and bared trees, totaled hundreds of cars, broke thousands of windows, flooded basements and shredded the siding and roofs on most homes, a team of Wyoming Army National Guard soldiers hit the ground in Pine Bluffs to help residents dig out and clean up.
“We’re basically going east to west and north to south, from house to house and helping pick up debris,” said Lt. Col. Terry Jenkins, officer in charge for the 20-soldier detail. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
In spite of the rain, dozens of PSEG Long Island employees proudly showed up to help end breast cancer at the Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walk in Suffolk County on Oct. 27, 2019.
Throughout the year, groups of employees have participated in community service at the INN Mary Brennan Soup Kitchen in Hempstead. Our employees love helping out our neighbors.
U.S. Army Soldiers with the 2nd Battalion, 113th Infantry Regiment, New Jersey Army National Guard, listen to U.S. Rep. Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey during the welcome home ceremony for the 268 New Jersey Army National Guard Soldiers at the National Guard Armory in Teaneck, N.J., Nov. 30, 2019. The Soldiers conducted a variety of missions, including base security, aircraft security, emergency response, intelligence collection, and security force assistance across a broad area of eastern Africa in support of Operation Enduring Freedom - Horn of Africa. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)
PSEG Long Island employees participate in all aspects of this volunteer effort, Angel Tree" - after buying gifts for more than 100 Angel Tree children, our employees spend a few days sorting the gifts at the Salvation Army's Riverhead office, then we help distribute them to families for their young loved ones.
Wyoming National Guard soldiers responded to a Feb. 11 request from the governor and Wyoming Homeland Security to mitigate ice-jam induced flooding in Worland and surrounding areas. By Saturday morning, upwards of 50 Guardsmen were working to reinforce berms along the Big Horn River between two overpasses and critical infrastructure near downtown with sandbag-fortified concrete barriers. By Sunday afternoon, with the addition of another 20-man rapid action team (RAT), and as hundreds of community members helped fill sandbags, Guard crews were moving four truckloads of about 200 sandbags an hour out to the berms. Monday, it was determined to dispatch another 20 person RAT team to Worland to help in further operations with sandbags and berms. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
148th Fighter Wing member and owner of Rymel Construction Tech. Sgt. Ryan Ostrofsky unpackages shingles alongside Western Lake Superior Habitat for Humanity Executive Director, Daryl Yankee Saturday Aug. 4, 2012 at a home in Superior Wis. Ostrofsky coordinated the help of approximately 12 Bulldogs in reconditioning the house. (National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Scott G. Herrington)
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U.S. Army Soldiers with Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 114th Infantry Regiment, New Jersey Army National Guard, are hugged by family members after the welcome home ceremony for the 68 Soldiers at the National Guard Armory in Woodbury, N.J., Dec. 8, 2019. The infantrymen, who are part of New Jersey’s 44th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, served as a security forces element for Area Support Group-Qatar in support of Operation Spartan Shield. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)
Wyoming National Guard soldiers responded to a Feb. 11 request from the governor and Wyoming Homeland Security to mitigate ice-jam induced flooding in Worland and surrounding areas. By Saturday morning, upwards of 50 Guardsmen were working to reinforce berms along the Big Horn River between two overpasses and critical infrastructure near downtown with sandbag-fortified concrete barriers. By Sunday afternoon, with the addition of another 20-man rapid action team (RAT), and as hundreds of community members helped fill sandbags, Guard crews were moving four truckloads of about 200 sandbags an hour out to the berms. Monday, it was determined to dispatch another 20 person RAT team to Worland to help in further operations with sandbags and berms. By 16 Feb., RATs had finished operations in Worland, and Manderson and moved up to Greybull, which is currently under a flood warning. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
Wyoming National Guard soldiers responded to a Feb. 11 request from the governor and Wyoming Homeland Security to mitigate ice-jam induced flooding in Worland and surrounding areas. By Saturday morning, upwards of 50 Guardsmen were working to reinforce berms along the Big Horn River between two overpasses and critical infrastructure near downtown with sandbag-fortified concrete barriers. By Sunday afternoon, with the addition of another 20-man rapid action team (RAT), and as hundreds of community members helped fill sandbags, Guard crews were moving four truckloads of about 200 sandbags an hour out to the berms. Monday, it was determined to dispatch another 20 person RAT team to Worland to help in further operations with sandbags and berms. By 16 Feb., RATs had finished operations in Worland, and Manderson and moved up to Greybull, which is currently under a flood warning. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
The town of Mocksville raced into the Christmas season with the 5th Annual “Twas the Night Before” Bed Race, and Trailers of the East Coast was well represented, sponsoring two of the 20 race teams who made the mad dash down Main Street.
Every year PSEG Long Island employees sponsor local children enrolled in the Salvation Army's Angel Tree program. This year more than 300 employees made the holiday wishes come true for more than 125 Long Island children whose families would not have been able to afford Christmas gifts.
Volunteers assist Matt Osvold (right) during his Eagle Scout project to clean and maintain the historic Green Prairie cemetery on Camp Ripley Saturday Nov 2, 2013.
The town of Mocksville raced into the Christmas season with the 5th Annual “Twas the Night Before” Bed Race, and Trailers of the East Coast was well represented, sponsoring two of the 20 race teams who made the mad dash down Main Street.
Throughout the year, groups of employees have participated in community service at the INN Mary Brennan Soup Kitchen in Hempstead. Our employees love helping out our neighbors.
As they we do every December, more than 50 PSEG Long Island employees and their family members supported Wreaths Across America this weekend. The group of volunteers honored our war heroes at Calverton National Cemetery in Calverton and Long Island National Cemetery in Pinelawn by helping to place tens of thousands of wreaths at the graves of our fallen veterans.
New Jersey Gov. Philip D. Murphy, at podium, addresses the audience during an Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve (ESGR) presentation prior to the farewell ceremony for more than 180 New Jersey Army National Guard Soldiers from Alpha and Charlie Companies, 2nd Battalion, 113th Infantry Regiment, at the Prudential Center, Newark, N.J., Feb. 4, 2019. ESGR develops and promotes supportive work environments for Guard and Reserve service members through outreach, recognition, and educational opportunities that increase awareness of applicable laws, as well as resolves employer conflicts between service members and their employers. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)
U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Vihal Patel, Alpha Company, 104th Brigade Engineer Battalion, New Jersey Army National Guard, is reunited with his family after the Battalion’s welcome home ceremony at the National Guard Armory at West Orange, N.J., Dec. 13, 2019. The Soldiers, who are part of New Jersey’s 44th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, served in support of Operation Spartan Shield in Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)
PSEG Long Island employees volunteered at a variety of school supply drives this year for Family Service League, LIADV (Long Island Against Domestic Violence), New Hour, Salvation Army and the United Way this year. An internal employee-initiated drive provided backpacks filled with supplies to 374 schoolkids through a variety of grassroots agencies and organizations across Long Island and the Rockaways.
Wyoming National Guard soldiers responded to a Feb. 11 request from the governor and Wyoming Homeland Security to mitigate ice-jam induced flooding in Worland and surrounding areas. By Saturday morning, upwards of 50 Guardsmen were working to reinforce berms along the Big Horn River between two overpasses and critical infrastructure near downtown with sandbag-fortified concrete barriers. By Sunday afternoon, with the addition of another 20-man rapid action team (RAT), and as hundreds of community members helped fill sandbags, Guard crews were moving four truckloads of about 200 sandbags an hour out to the berms. Monday, it was determined to dispatch another 20 person RAT team to Worland to help in further operations with sandbags and berms. By 16 Feb., RATs had finished operations in Worland, and Manderson and moved up to Greybull, which is currently under a flood warning. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
As they we do every December, more than 50 PSEG Long Island employees and their family members supported Wreaths Across America this weekend. The group of volunteers honored our war heroes at Calverton National Cemetery in Calverton and Long Island National Cemetery in Pinelawn by helping to place tens of thousands of wreaths at the graves of our fallen veterans.
The town of Mocksville raced into the Christmas season with the 5th Annual “Twas the Night Before” Bed Race, and Trailers of the East Coast was well represented, sponsoring two of the 20 race teams who made the mad dash down Main Street.
U.S. Army Soldiers with the 2nd Battalion, 113th Infantry Regiment, New Jersey Army National Guard, stand at attention during the welcome home ceremony for the 268 New Jersey Army National Guard Soldiers at the National Guard Armory in Teaneck, N.J., Nov. 30, 2019. The Soldiers conducted a variety of missions, including base security, aircraft security, emergency response, intelligence collection, and security force assistance across a broad area of eastern Africa in support of Operation Enduring Freedom - Horn of Africa. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)
More than a dozen PSEG Long Island employees pitched in on Nov. 13, 2019 to renovate the American Legion Post #1082 in East Meadow as part of a week of community service to honor our veterans.
Brig. Gen. Jemal J. Beale, left, the Adjutant General of New Jersey; New Jersey Gov. Philip D. Murphy, second from left, present New Jersey state flags to Capt. John F. Dalton IV, right, commander, Alpha Company, and Capt. Joseph S. Cecere, commander, Charlie Company, during the farewell ceremony for more than 180 New Jersey Army National Guard Soldiers from Alpha and Charlie Companies, 2nd Battalion, 113th Infantry Regiment, at the Prudential Center, Newark, N.J., Feb. 4, 2019. The Battalion will be deploying in support of Operation Enduring Freedom - Horn of Africa. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)
As they we do every December, more than 50 PSEG Long Island employees and their family members supported Wreaths Across America this weekend. The group of volunteers honored our war heroes at Calverton National Cemetery in Calverton and Long Island National Cemetery in Pinelawn by helping to place tens of thousands of wreaths at the graves of our fallen veterans.
More than a dozen PSEG Long Island employees pitched in on Nov. 13, 2019 to renovate the American Legion Post #1082 in East Meadow as part of a week of community service to honor our veterans.
A U.S. Army Soldier with the 2nd Battalion, 113th Infantry Regiment, New Jersey Army National Guard, is kissed by his daughter after the welcome home ceremony for the 268 New Jersey Army National Guard Soldiers at the National Guard Armory in Teaneck, N.J., Nov. 30, 2019. The Soldiers conducted a variety of missions, including base security, aircraft security, emergency response, intelligence collection, and security force assistance across a broad area of eastern Africa in support of Operation Enduring Freedom - Horn of Africa. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)
On 7/16/21 PSEG Long Island held the first of six food collection drives to help replenish the food supply at Island Harvest's warehouse. Thank you to all of the wonderful, caring Long Islanders who came out to donate. This drive was held at the Stop & Shop in Islandia. Check here for upcoming donation sites: www.psegliny.com/feedLI
YUMA, Ariz. – Yuma Free Clinic hosted its first Yuma Free Cup fundraiser at Gila Ridge High School June 22, 2013. The event pitted the Yuma All Star Spartans F.C., a mix of local high school athletes, against the Mexican 17U National Team. Hundreds of soccer fans from across the area attended the event. The Mexican 17U National team defeated the Yuma All Star Spartans 10 -1. Proceeds from the fundraiser will benefit Yuma Free Clinic and enable the nonprofit to continue its mission of making free medical care available for low-income families that qualify. See Yuma Free Clinic for more information. -- Photograph by Keith "The Bull" Stevenson © Nonprofit Media Production 2013 All rights reserved
Wyoming National Guard soldiers responded to a Feb. 11 request from the governor and Wyoming Homeland Security to mitigate ice-jam induced flooding in Worland and surrounding areas. By Saturday morning, upwards of 50 Guardsmen were working to reinforce berms along the Big Horn River between two overpasses and critical infrastructure near downtown with sandbag-fortified concrete barriers. By Sunday afternoon, with the addition of another 20-man rapid action team (RAT), and as hundreds of community members helped fill sandbags, Guard crews were moving four truckloads of about 200 sandbags an hour out to the berms. Monday, it was determined to dispatch another 20 person RAT team to Worland to help in further operations with sandbags and berms. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
As they we do every December, more than 50 PSEG Long Island employees and their family members supported Wreaths Across America this weekend. The group of volunteers honored our war heroes at Calverton National Cemetery in Calverton and Long Island National Cemetery in Pinelawn by helping to place tens of thousands of wreaths at the graves of our fallen veterans.
Wyoming National Guard soldiers responded to a Feb. 11 request from the governor and Wyoming Homeland Security to mitigate ice-jam induced flooding in Worland and surrounding areas. By Saturday morning, upwards of 50 Guardsmen were working to reinforce berms along the Big Horn River between two overpasses and critical infrastructure near downtown with sandbag-fortified concrete barriers. By Sunday afternoon, with the addition of another 20-man rapid action team (RAT), and as hundreds of community members helped fill sandbags, Guard crews were moving four truckloads of about 200 sandbags an hour out to the berms. Monday, it was determined to dispatch another 20 person RAT team to Worland to help in further operations with sandbags and berms. By 16 Feb., RATs had finished operations in Worland, and Manderson and moved up to Greybull, which is currently under a flood warning. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
PSEG Long Island employees are in the giving spirit -- raising $3,200 to buy gifts for the children of Suburban Housing, Bay Shore’s nonprofit that provides housing and counseling services to low-income families. Two dozen children were treated to a holiday party in our Brentwood office where the 133 gifts were given out.
Wyoming National Guard soldiers responded to a Feb. 11 request from the governor and Wyoming Homeland Security to mitigate ice-jam induced flooding in Worland and surrounding areas. By Saturday morning, upwards of 50 Guardsmen were working to reinforce berms along the Big Horn River between two overpasses and critical infrastructure near downtown with sandbag-fortified concrete barriers. By Sunday afternoon, with the addition of another 20-man rapid action team (RAT), and as hundreds of community members helped fill sandbags, Guard crews were moving four truckloads of about 200 sandbags an hour out to the berms. Monday, it was determined to dispatch another 20 person RAT team to Worland to help in further operations with sandbags and berms. (Wyoming Army National Guard photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire)
U.S. Army Soldiers with the 2nd Battalion, 113th Infantry Regiment, New Jersey Army National Guard, hug members of Sgt. Thomas F. Anastasio family after the farewell ceremony for more than 190 New Jersey Army National Guard Soldiers from Bravo and Delta Companies, 2nd Battalion, 113th Infantry Regiment, at the National Guard Armory in Jersey City, N.J., Feb. 5, 2019. The Battalion will be deploying in support of Operation Enduring Freedom - Horn of Africa. (New Jersey National Guard photo by Mark C. Olsen)