Follow us! >

NALC honors heroic postal workers at its annual awards ceremony

Photo: The NALC honorees gather in a Washington, DC, park. In the top row from the left are Brian Meyers Sr., Matthew Ross Sr., Anthony “Tony” Paolillo, Taya Cradle and Gerald “Jerry” Loney. In the bottom row from the left are Skyler Wilburg, Michael Waite, Andrew Fontanetta, Rungphet Bodnar, David Moulton and Tesfaye Deyasso.

A Postal Service employee who helped a motorist escape a burning vehicle along a busy Minneapolis area highway received the top hero of the year award from the National Association of Letter Carriers last week.

Tesfaye Deyasso, a St. Louis Park, MN, letter carrier, was driving home after his shift when he came upon a car ablaze with the driver trapped inside. He made a lifesaving decision to be the first to stop and initiate a dramatic rescue effort.

As Deyasso and others raced to free the motorist, they were further challenged by the road’s guardrail — which had pinned the driver’s door — and growing flames that prevented access to the passenger’s door. As one rescuer broke the window, Deyasso and the others pulled the man out to safety before the vehicle went up in flames.

“A lot of people think that we only deliver mail and packages, but I would like to let them know we can also save a life. We can help people,” said Deyasso, who was recognized March 20 as the national hero of the year at the union’s annual awards luncheon in Washington, DC.

The union, also known as NALC, recognized three letter carriers as regional heroes: Brian Meyers Sr. of Johnstown, PA, who stopped a man from being stabbed multiple times by an assailant; Rungphet Bodnar of Flint, MI, who used her dog spray to repel an attack on a little girl at a school bus stop; and Gerald “Jerry” Loney of Topeka, KS, who aided an injured customer by applying tourniquets to the man’s wrists to stop bleeding.

The Humanitarian of the Year Award went to Matthew Ross Sr., a Syracuse, NY, carrier technician who does charitable work in his community.

Two letter carriers received the union’s Vigilant Hero Award: Michael Waite of Wallingford, CT, who helped several residents evacuate a row of 14 townhomes during a fire, and Taya Cradle of Laurel, MD, who followed a 911 dispatcher’s instructions and performed CPR on a customer who had collapsed.

The Partnership Award was given to Andrew Fontanetta and Anthony “Tony” Paolillo of Flushing, NY, for leading a blood drive that has collected more than 1,500 pints of blood from 21 Post Offices over two decades.

Awards for honorable acts went to City Carrier Assistant Skyler Wilburg, who stopped a rolling vehicle after a customer failed to place it in park in the Albertson, NY, Post Office parking lot, and Salem, MA, Letter Carrier David Moulton, who came to the rescue of a 3-year-old boy who wandered away from his day care facility on a frigid day.

A panel of independent judges determined the recipients in each category.

Several of the union’s honorees also received awards from the Postmaster General Heroes’ Program.

Sign up to receive our Daily Postal News blast

Related Articles

Tell us what you think below!

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Hot this week

USPS is delivering its new fleet

The organization plans to roll out 106,000 new vehicles by 2028, including 45,000 battery-electric next-generation delivery vehicles and 21,000 commercial-off-the-shelf battery-electric vehicles.

Senator Collins Introduces Bipartisan Bill to Improve Federal Workers’ Access to Injury Compensation

Today, U.S. Senators Susan Collins and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) introduced the bipartisan Improving Access to Workers’ Compensation for Injured Federal Workers Act.

Rep. Angie Craig Blasts USPS after Q4 Report Ranks MN Postal Performance One of the Worst in the Country

Today, U.S. Representative Angie Craig blasted U.S. Postal Service (USPS) leadership in Minnesota following the release of the USPS Office of Inspector General’s (OIG) Fiscal Year 2025 (FY25) 4th quarter (Q4) service performance report

Former DeWitt Post Office Station Manager Sentenced for Fraud

As part of his prior guilty plea, Chirico admitted that between January 2021 and March 2023, he stole $81,553.94 in stamps from the DeWitt Post Office and falsified postal records to conceal the theft of the stamps

Legislation would make it a federal crime to steal packages from commercial carriers, not just USPS

Rep. Josh Gottheimer, of New Jersey, said he's reintroducing a 2022 bill, the Porch Pirates Act, that would expand penalties for theft of packages from USPS to commercial carriers like UPS, FedEx and Amazon.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img
Secret Link
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x