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Sandy Relief Benefit Donates Proceeds to John Theissen Children's Foundation

Wantagh-based charity given funds from a Feb. 23 fundraiser at Mulcahy's after losing nearly $10,000 in toys and electronics from flooding at fun center caused by snowstorm.

Rich McElligott of Merrick watched his family, friends and neighbors forced out of their homes after Superstorm Sandy and felt he needed to do something to help.

McElligott joined forces with longtime friends Kerrin Shearin and Joanne Colamartino to host a relief benefit at Mulcahy's Pub & Concert Hallthis past Saturday. From working with founder John Theissen on past events, McElligott knew the Wantagh-based John Theissen Children's Foundation would be the perfect recipient of the day's earnings.

"We were thinking about all of our families and our friends who were affected by Sandy and this is just a little something we all wanted to do to give back to those who have been jammed up from the storm," McElligott said. "Without John's help, none of this would have been possible, and the work he does is fantastic."

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Since Sandy hit, Theissen said the foundation has given out nearly $25,000 in donations to storm victims alone with more and more requests coming in. Theissen and his family were displaced from their own Seaford home, but he said the stories he heard from others were much more pressing.

"My kids lost a lot - their toys, their clothes, everything - but I can buy them new stuff," he explained. "There's more than a dozen families on the south shore who have kids with cancer. They lost their homes, their medicine, everything. It's just brutal."

As Theissen and his family were finally able to move back into their home this month, flooding from a massive snowstorm caused his extensive damage to the foundation's fun center.

"We lost almost $10,000 in toys and electronics and I had to cancel parties that we had scheduled for March," Theissen said. "We're trying to see what insurance is going to cover, but I have to think about the future and what could happen down there. Do I try and fix it up?"

Wantagh resident Pete Brasile saw the fun center's damage first hand and recruited the Wantagh High School football team to help clean up.

"We threw out two or three 20-yard dumpsters filled to capacity with toys," said Brasile. "If you've ever been in John's wish room, it's huge, and it was filled with toys, and now half of them are gone."

In light of the recent hit to the foundation, Brasile and a group of volunteers will be hosting a fundraiser to benefit the foundation directly on June 1 at Mulcahy's.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
joe21 May 20, 2013 at 12:06 pm
$20 million of the $40 million will be spent on adding a pocket track, presumably east ofRead More Massapequa. Currently, trains are reversed east of the Wantagh interlocking, and while the engineer walks through the train, it blocks the track. This addition of a "pocket track" will probably also help Wantagh commuters some times, just as an emergency pull-over space on the LIE helps.
Eric Jurist May 18, 2013 at 03:27 pm
True, true, I'm sure there's a political payoff/payback here somewhere.
Constance Roland May 19, 2013 at 09:05 am
Lol!! Write on!!
Chris Wendt May 15, 2013 at 02:05 pm
A tantalizing, mind-teasing story about a faceless team with no names who won honorable mention forRead More some project about which we learned absolutely nothing from this article. Journalism 101: Who what, why when and where?