WASHINGTON, D.C., Sept. 14, 2012 —Thomas Logue, a 28-year letter carrier from New Jersey, and Charlie Rose, a 23-year veteran in Ohio, are among those to be honored by the National Association of Letter Carriers on Sept. 20 as 2012’s Heroes of the Year.
Logue, of Cape Atlantic, who saved a boy engulfed by a large wave on Father’s Day, has been named 2012 National Hero of the Year. He saw the youngster pulled out to sea by a rip current beforedisappearing under a wave.
Rose, recipient of the Special Carrier Alert award, detected at least a dozen natural gas leaks on his route, saving lives and prompting the local gas utility to replace 17,235 feet of pipe and Athens’ city council to require carbon monoxide detectors in 4,500 new rental properties.
Several other carriers also are being recognized as heroes. They represent thousands of letter carriers who not only deliver the mail to 150 million households and businesses six days a week, but who often assist in situations involving accidents, fires, crimes or health crises.
- Mike Hollmann III of Phoenix, the Western Region Hero, was on his route one Saturday when he noticed a woman lying on the ground near her wheelchair being attacked by three angry pit bulls. Scaling to the top of a fence, Hollmann distracted the dogs until police came.
- Mike Sylvester of Duluth, MN, the Central Region Hero, saved lives after an automobile hit a house, rupturing the gas line to the house and leaving the car smoking and its fuel tank punctured.
- Celia Ruiz of Virginia Beach, VA, the Eastern Region Hero, observed her neighbor’s children thrown airborne after being struck by a drunk driver and applied CPR.
- Cassandra Summers of Naperville, IL, the Humanitarian of the Year, founded a non-profit group to redecorate the rooms of breast cancer patients.
- Cartoonist Bil Keane, whose “Family Circus” artwork promoted the National Association of Letter Carriers’ annual “Stamp Out Hunger” food drive for many years, will receive the first Legacy Award. Keane, whose single-panel “Family Circus” comic strip began in 1960 and appears in almost 1,500 newspapers, died in November.
The 2012 NALC Heroes of the Year will be honored by Fredric Rolando, president of the National Association of Letter Carriers, at a special ceremony Sept. 20 at the Hyatt Regency on Capitol Hill, 400 New Jersey Ave. NW.
The event also marks the 30th anniversary of the reinvigorated Carrier Alert Program, a free program that elderly or homebound residents can join so vigilant letter carriers notify relatives or authorities at any sign of distress.

I market my pulbic relations and marketing communications business by sending out DVDs. So I am a fairly regular visitor to the King of Prussia Post Office because at the closest post office I can find there is only one window and the postal employee (notice I don’t say worker) opens late, closes early, closes at lunch time and is arrogant to boot. King of Prussia is not the dump yours is, and one of the employees is efficient and polite. But there are always slow lines, usually only one window open and not a lot of eye contact as employees stroll through behind the counter. But USPS is reliable, less expensive and no further than my nearest FedEx or UPS. For the most part I go with USPS. On the other hand, if I want to make a statement with my package, it’s my impression FedEx is the way to go.