| WASHINGTON, July 19, 2007 – For
service members, “Operation Open Arms”
is all about fun in the southwestern
Florida sun. It’s about much more than
that for Capt. John Bunch, however.
John
Bunch, a former Marine
and current southwestern
Florida fishing guide,
shows off a snook he and
Operation Open Arms
participants caught
during a day of fishing.
Bunch started Operation
Open Arms in 2005 to
provide service members
home on leave with free
or discounted services
and activities before
they return to their
foreign duty stations.
Courtesy photo
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Through its network of more than 125
sponsors, Operation Open Arms provides
opportunities for free or discounted
vacation activities.
“It’s not about anything but tangible
acts of kindness for our troops for two
weeks,” said Bunch, a fishing guide and
the organization’s founder. “It’s pretty
much two weeks of just about anything
you want to do, including kayaking (and)
sailing trips that are free.”
The only requirement is that
participants be active-duty
servicemembers on leave from a foreign
duty station. Marines, who are not
granted leave during deployments, are
the only exception to this rule. They
must provide proof they have recently
been assigned to a foreign duty station.
“The only responsibility that U.S.
servicemen have is to be reverent and
respectful of the sponsors and to be
courteous,” Bunch said.
Bunch, a former Marine first lieutenant
-- the “captain” title refers to his
current occupation as a well-known
fishing guide – said he started the
program without really realizing what he
was doing.
In April 2005, the Vietnam veteran was
eating lunch in a restaurant in St.
James City, Fla., a small fishing
village on Pine Island, about 30 miles
from Fort Myers. A young soldier and
fishing enthusiast, Army Spc. Travis
Downes, recognized Bunch from the TV
fishing show he co-hosts.
The soldier asked where he could go
fishing along the shore because he
couldn’t afford a charter trip.
When Bunch discovered Downes had orders
to Iraq, he made a command decision. “I
said, ‘Don’t worry about the money. I’ll
take you fishing, and there’ll be no
charge,’” Bunch said. “He just
absolutely couldn’t believe it.”
Downes and his father offered to
contribute something at the end of the
trip, but the captain of GiddyUp Fishing
Charter wouldn’t hear of it.
“I said, ‘Absolutely not. Travis is
paying a big enough price by going back
to Iraq for the third time. (This is)
the least I can do for him,’” Bunch
said. “It actually made me feel better
to receive nothing, … given the
circumstances.”
That feeling got him thinking. Before
the day was over, he had four other
fishing captains lined up to provide
fishing excursions for servicemembers
from Pine Island who came home on two
weeks of rest and recuperation leave.
The next calls he made were to five
contacts from his days as a golf pro and
five restaurant owners on the island;
all agreed to provide free golf games
and meals, respectively.
Then a story about the program appeared
in the local newspaper, catching the eye
of a “Today” show correspondent’s
mother. Before long, the NBC program had
set up shop on Pine Island to tell the
tale of Operation Open Arms.
The segment, which aired Memorial Day
2005, generated a new wave of sponsors
ready to offer services to troops.
“It went from a very small thing -- a
very well-intended thing that would
serve a very small number of people --
to now a runaway successful train.”
The “Today” show exposure also generated
something else: a desire for the program
to go national.
“After the ‘Today’ show, I received
2,188 e-mails and letters about
Operation Open Arms from all over the
country,” Bunch said. “All of the
letters were pretty much the same thing,
‘Can you come (here) and do this?’
“Given how easy it was to do this,
there’s absolutely no reason there
shouldn’t be an Operation Open Arms in
every single county of every single
state in the United States, in my
opinion,” he said, adding that he’s
offering “lessons learned” to those
interested in starting their own
programs.
Though the seed for Operation Open Arms
may have sprouted when Bunch met Downes
in 2005, he said it had been planted
when he was a young Marine officer.
“I was a young second lieutenant in the
Marines going through the D.C. airport,
and some war protestors spit on my brand
new Marine Corps officer uniform,” he
said. “I swore that day if I could ever
treat U.S. service people better than
what I was treated … I would do it.
“It was almost like this whole thing was
meant to happen from that incident,” he
said.
Bunch has made good on that promise to
himself. What originated as a program
for servicemembers from the
17-mile-by-2-mile Pine Island, has never
turned down any servicemember wanting to
enjoy what the sponsors are offering. He
said they had servicemembers in from
Texas and Arizona this past Christmas.
Eligible servicemembers wishing to
participate in Operation Open Arms
should visit the program’s Web site,
www.operationopenarms.com, and follow
the instructions. Because Bunch accepts
no funds and runs the program with just
two volunteers, participants must
contact and make arrangement directly
with the sponsors, he said.
Servicemembers will be required to
provide a military identification card,
as well as leave documents.
Editor's Note: To find out about more
individuals, groups and organizations
that are helping support the troops,
visit www.AmericaSupportsYou.mil.
America Supports You directly connects
military members to the support of the
America people and offers a tool to the
general public in their quest to find
meaningful ways to support the military
community.
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