KAA schedules next “Stop the Bleed” class for Saturday, Nov. 14

The Killingworth Ambulance Association will hold another in its series of “Stop the Bleed” classes on Saturday, Nov. 14, at its Route 81 headquarters. The course, which is free to the public, begins at 11 a.m. and lasts approximately one hour.

Persons ages 12 and older are invited to attend, with all required to wear protective face masks.

Important: Interested persons are also asked to complete an RSVP form that can be found here (http://www.killingworthambulance.org/news-events/rsvp/) or under the “Classes” pull-down menu at the top of the KAA home page.

“Stop the Bleed” is a nationwide awareness campaign that was launched in 2015 by the White House and Department of Homeland Security. It is designed to empower bystanders with training to deal with traumatic events and emergency bleeding situations before emergency help arrives.

The KAA first offered “Stop the Bleed” classes in July, 2017, making Killingworth the first Connecticut town to have its citizens certified. Since that time it has conducted 21 classes and had “Stop the Bleed” stations placed at the Killingworth Town Hall and Public Library.

For more information, contact the Killingworth Ambulance Association at (860) 663-2450.

Anderson heads trio of first responders honored by KAA

(Picture above, left to right: Dan Siegel, Lisa Anderson and Mark Clifton)

New year. Same story.

When the Killingworth Ambulance Association last weekend honored its top responders for 2019-20 the results sounded familiar. That’s because they were. The three EMTs who last year took the most calls were the same three EMTs honored Sunday at the KAA’s annual banquet.

Lisa Anderson, Dan Siegel and Mark Clifton, come on down.

Anderson answered the most calls, responding to 207 of the 327 — or 63.3 percent. Siegel was second at 167 and Clifton third with 83. The same three were honored a year ago, with Siegel finishing first. Ironically, he took 11 fewer calls then (156) than he did in 2019-20.

Anderson was second and Clifton third a year ago.

“These three EMTs are the cornerstone of the KAA’s service to the town,” said KAA president Dan O’Sullivan. “To be a leader year after year shows tremendous dedication, commitment to the community and sacrifice of personal time.

“Lisa Anderson having over 200 calls is an amazing number. The dedication of these leaders is particularly noteworthy this year with the added risk of the pandemic. I encourage anyone who knows them to reach out to them and thank them.”

Anderson’s 207 calls are so “amazing,” as O’Sullivan put it, that during the KAA’s monthly board meeting Wednesday it was suggested they might be a record for a Killingworth EMT. While that could not be confirmed, board members agreed the figure is the most in recent memory.

Anderson has been a Killingworth EMT for five years and one of its top three responders for all but one.

“I do this,” she said, “because I love doing it.”

In addition to Anderson, Siegel and Clifton, the KAA honored retiring EMT Bruce Bowman. Bowman, a Killingworth Ambulance Association EMT the past 10 years and one of its top three responders in 2018, is moving with wife Liz to Tennessee.

Clifton presented him with a toy ambulance as part of the ceremony.

“I thought it was great,” said Bowman. “We’ll take it with us to Tennessee.”

“Stop the Bleed” classes return; first scheduled for Sept. 12

The Killingworth Ambulance Association will hold its first “Stop the Bleed” class of 2020 on Saturday, Sept. 12, at the KAA’s Route 81 headquarters. The course begins at 11 a.m., and is free and open to persons ages 12 years and older.

Those who attend are required to wear protective face masks.

“Stop the Bleed” is a nationwide awareness campaign that was launched in 2015 by the White House and Department of Homeland Security (https://www.stopthebleed.org/). It is designed to empower bystanders with the training to deal with traumatic events and emergency bleeding situations before emergency help arrives.

Its value was underscored last October at Vinal Tech in Middletown when a state trooper responding to an accident implemented a “Stop the Bleed” kit to treat what was called “a catastrophic injury” involving profuse bleeding.

Officials later said the trooper’s quick thinking may have saved the victim’s life.

The KAA first offered “Stop the Bleed” classes in July, 2017, making Killingworth the first Connecticut town to have its citizens certified. Since that time it has conducted 20 classes and had “Stop the Bleed” stations placed at the Killingworth Town Hall and Public Library.

For more information, contact the Killingworth Ambulance Association at (860) 663-2450.

Herrmann, DeLuca recipients of 2020 KAA scholarships

(Pictured above: Olivia Herrmann, one of two winners of the 2020 KAA scholarships)

Haddam-Killingworth High-School graduates Olivia Herrmann and Victoria DeLuca are this year’s recipients of the Killingworth Ambulance Association scholarships.

The awards are granted annually to Killingworth residents who are graduating high-school seniors planning on continuing their educations at two-or-four-year schools and who maintained GPAs of 3.0 or higher, performed community service and intend to pursue careers in the medical, emergency services (fire, police, etc.) or other allied fields.

Herrmann and DeLuca checked all those boxes, with each intending to major in nursing … and no surprise there. Six of the past eight KAA scholarship recipients chose nursing as their fields of study.

“When picking my major,” said Herrmann, “I was deciding on nursing or biomedical engineering. I chose to pursue an education in nursing because I have a lot of close family members who were nurses, and that is something I wanted to emulate.”

DeLuca said she hopes to become a registered nurse before returning to school to pursue a doctorate in nursing.

“Becoming a nurse is the most rewarding job I can think of,” she said. “Whenever I was sick as a child and had to go to the hospital I always remembered how compassionate the nurses were to me with whatever I needed.”

Here’s a quick look at this year’s winners:

OLIVIA HERRMANN – Ranked eighth in the HKHS senior class, Herrmann was a member of the school’s field hockey and lacrosse teams. Among her 51 hours of community service, she volunteered for the annual Hartford Kids’ Holiday Service, served as a coach for the HK Youth Lacrosse Girls’ Instructional team and was a referee for the youth lacrosse program. She will attend Clemson University and said she hopes to continue her education by gaining a graduate degree in nursing.

VICTORIA DeLUCA – She completed 175 hours of community service, including roles as a four-year brand ambassador for the high school and student teacher at the Dance Corner in Killingworth for four years. DeLuca will attend Southern Connecticut State University and hopes to focus her studies on pediatrics. “As long as I am helping people,” she said, “that’s all that matters.”

Herrmann and DeLuca continue a run of young women as KAA scholarship recipients. Over the past two years, the KAA has awarded eight scholarships — including six last year — and all have been to females.

Briana’s odyssey: “Zooming’ to head of EMT class from 2,500 miles away

(Pictured above: Instructors Marguerite (L) and Mike Haaga (R) at the head of their EMT class, with Briana Lucarelli on the computer screen between them)

With the gradual reopening of Connecticut, the Killingworth Ambulance Association has resumed EMT classes at its Route 81 headquarters. But while the course material hasn’t changed, the participants have.

Instructors Mike and Marguerite Haaga wear protective face masks. So do the students in attendance. And social distancing is emphasized. In fact, it’s enforced so strictly that one student isn’t even in the building.

She sits 2,500 miles away.

That would be Briana Lucarelli, 30, who grew up in Deep River, graduated from UConn and takes the class via Zoom from a ranger station in Powell, Id. Like the eight other students involved, Lucarelli began the EMT course in January, driving to Killingworth on Monday and Thursday nights, with occasional Saturdays mixed in.

But then the COVID-19 pandemic happened, and everything changed.

Classes ended at the KAA site in March. Instruction began via Zoom. And Lucarelli departed Connecticut, driving her 1995 Toyota Camry to Idaho, where she works half the year as a firefighter with the U.S. Forest Service – a seasonal job she began in 2019.

Her car has 222,000 miles on it. Lucarelli has almost as many in her post-college travels.

Though she majored in art (photography) at Storrs, with a minor in sociology, her interests since leaving school have veered in far-flung directions. Like Wyoming. And Utah. Colorado. Texas. Even New Zealand, where she spent five months hiking 1,900 miles.

“My heart was more in outdoor work after college,” Lucarelli said. “I think I kinda got burned out on art a bit. And after college I had more time.”

So she took advantage of it. She applied for a job at Yellowstone National Park and got it, working six months in the outdoor recreational field. Then she moved to Utah where she worked two months at a ski resort. From there, it was down to Texas and two-and-half-years with the Texas Conservation Corps.

After that, it was six months in Colorado. Then, five months in New Zealand where she and friends hiked the Te Araroa trail spanning the north and south islands.

“Toward the end of college,” she said, “I realized this is what I wanted to do. My idea was to get out and see the country, and the best way to do that was to take a job there rather than take a vacation there and get to know it as a tourist.

“It’s really simple. I just pack up my car – all my belongings can fit in it – and I drive somewhere. It’s really comforting. Because all my jobs are spring, summer and fall, the winter is really my off time.”

For that reason, this winter she tried something different. She returned to Connecticut.

“I’d been away long enough,” she said, “and I just felt it was time to spend a winter season home … just for family.”

Not surprisingly, she couldn’t sit still. Hearing about the EMT course in Killingworth, she enrolled in January and the rest you know … except, perhaps, why she wants to become a first responder.

“I always thought I’d be good at it,” she said. “It’s something I always wanted to. In the back of my head I wanted to further my medical education by furthering my skills.”

And that’s precisely what’s happening. On a recent Thursday night, Lucarelli was there on Mike Haaga’s 13-inch Dell laptop that rested on a table at the head of the class. She wore headphones. She did not wear a mask. In front of her were seven classmates — four in one row, three in the other. To either side were the Haagas, each asking students if they needed clarifications for a 150-question practice quiz they’d taken.

Lucarelli did. In fact, she needed a litany of them.

“I was wondering about number 10,” she said.

Question: You are on the scene of a 22-year-old female patient who is unresponsive. The patient’s mother states that she is deathly allergic to peanuts and accidentally ate stir fry cooked in peanut oil. The patient is unresponsive, with agonal respirations at six per minute. You insert an oral airway and administer oxygen at 15 liters per minute by bag-valve mask. You notice that it is difficult to bag the patient. Your partner listens to lung sounds and states they are very diminished in the upper fields and absent in the lower fields. What is the best action?

“Well, I think it’s D,” said Lucarelli. “But I’m not sure if that’s correct.”

It was.

Answer: D) Request orders from medical control to administer epinephrine.

“Briana, you have more?” Mike Haaga asked.

She did, though she said she was having trouble with the audio. So Haaga turned off a fan in a corner of the room, turned up the volume on his laptop and swerved the computer to face him.

“That better?” he asked.

“Not really,” she said.

At that point Haaga discovered the source of the problem: His mic was off. So he made the adjustment, Lucarelli was satisfied and the class resumed. Consider it a minor glitch. Lucarelli once lost contact six times during a class but reconnected and got through that, too.

“I’m grateful to have the opportunity to do Zoom,” she said later. ”Otherwise, I wouldn’t be able to finish the class.”

When all questions were answered – and there were over 25 – the Haagas divided the class, with Mike taking four students downstairs to an ambulance bay, while Marguerite kept the others – including Lucarelli – in the upstairs classroom for hands-on demonstrations like CPR and AEDs.

“Briana can go anywhere,” one student told me. “Once, we put her in an ambulance.”

Wait. What?

“We were teaching students how to use the stretcher on an ambulance,” said Mike Haaga. “What we do is put one student on it and have another load it so you can find out what it feels like. That’s when one of the students said, ‘Let’s load Briana.’ So we put the laptop on a stretcher, and someone loaded her in. Everybody was laughing.”

Like the rest of the class, Lucarelli will take a written test on June 22. Unlike the rest of the class, she won’t be able to perform the practical – or hands-on — exam until returning home in the fall. Then comes a national final, taken at her convenience.

What a long, strange trip it will have been.

“Part of the reason I’m interested in becoming an EMT is that I can’t do physical-labor jobs forever,” Lucarelli said. “So I wanted to have another life skill, either for my career or to enhance the job I’m doing. Helping others and leading others just makes me feel good. It gives me a purpose in life, and being an EMT is just another example of that.

“But I really have to give props to Mike and Marguerite. They are fantastic teachers, and they’re part of the reason why the class is going so well. They really care about the students learning information. They have a lot of experience and hand down that knowledge easily. If I had taken this in college that might not have been the case – which is one reason I’m so committed to it. I’m really lucky to be doing this with the KAA.”

HK Local Heroes Project salute includes three KAA members

(Pictured above, L-R: KAA honoree Marguerite Haaga and HK Local Heroes Project founder Beth Gagliardi)

Three members of the Killingworth Ambulance Association were honored Saturday for their work during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Marguerite Haaga, Dan Siegel and Lisa Anderson – all EMTs – were given awards by the HK Local Heroes Project after it solicited nominations from local townspeople. The three were among 78 persons to receive gifts or gift certificates that Beth Gagliardi, who originated the HK Local Heroes Project, and friend Amy Armstrong Koepke handed out Saturday morning at Irene Sheldon Park.

The event was informal, with rewards spread out on picnic tables, and the weather was uncooperative. It was raining, forcing Gagliardi to seek shelter by moving the function to the Sheldon pavilion. What’s more, Haaga was the only KAA member able to appear. Siegal was on an ambulance call, and Anderson was out of town.

Nevertheless, that didn’t diminish the gratitude Haaga felt for being recognized.

“It’s very nice,” she said. “I was a little surprised it was going to be me. I like working under the radar.”

That’s not easy for someone as active as Haaga. Vice president of the Killingworth Ambulance Association’s board of directors, she works with husband Mike as a paramedic in Bridgeport and joins him teaching EMT classes and American Heart Association courses. That puts her in the public domain, and the public has responded lately – with Haaga admitting she’s been the recipient of unexpected salutes the past two months, often by persons she doesn’t know.

“That’s probably the biggest thing,” she said. “Between Bridgeport and here there are a lot of thumbs-up and thank-yous, and that’s what affects you the most. It’s people who drive up to you that you don’t even know.”

That happened last week when a driver she didn’t recognize gained her attention, gave her a thumbs-up and blew a kiss through a mask. It happened in Bridgeport, but, as Haaga conceded, it could’ve been anywhere. Similar gestures of support are not uncommon, she said, and she is appreciative.

“You know people are thinking about you,” she said, “and that they know you’re working directly on patients.”

Which is precisely the point of the HK Local Heroes Project. Gagliardi, a sixth-grade teacher at Haddam-Killingworth Middle School, began the Project to remind persons on the frontlines of the COVD-19 pandemic – persons like Marguerite Haaga – that, as Haaga said, “people are thinking about you.”  With the help of her family, Gagliardi launched the HK Local Heroes Project on her personal Facebook page. The response was as enormous as it was immediate, so she expanded to town pages.

And then, as she put it, “it grew from there.”

With dozens of nominations and donations from local businesses and individuals, Gagliardi and her family chose awards by lottery on Facebook Live. Donations ranged from gift certificates for local restaurants and fitness facilities to window cleaning and two heart-shaped blacksmith hooks. Haaga received a bracelet donated by Lynn Gallant.

“Very, very nice,” she said. “They thought of me, and that’s great.”

Unfortunately, not all could receive prizes. There were over twice as many nominations (187) as awards (78). Hence the lottery. But those who didn’t win were encouraged to swing by Sheldon Park and pick up one of the many Thirty-One bags donated by Cindy Pitts.

They’re also told to stay tuned.

“Moving forward,” said Gagliardi, “I would like to continue this, perhaps raffling off one gift certificate a week. All of the additional raffle numbers are still in the (lottery) bowl. I think it’s important to maintain this support and momentum. What we can do will be contingent on donations.”

KAA teams with KVFC to make birthday “awesome” for 4-year-old

(L-R: James and Amanda Brackett, with sons J. P. and Zion far right)

Few children remember their fourth birthdays, but one Killingworth boy should have no trouble.

And if he forgets? No problem. His parents will be there to remind him.

Introducing James and Amanda Brackett, Killingworth residents fostering a child they’re trying to adopt. His name is Zion, and – thanks to James and Amanda — he celebrated his fourth birthday Wednesday morning in a brief and extraordinary manner.

With a parade.

Zion was the guest of honor as a caravan of trucks, police cars, unmarked vehicles and one ambulance drove by his Chittenden Road home. Lights flashed. Sirens blared. And Zion, cradled in the arms of Amanda Brackett, waved.

“It was awesome,” Amanda said. “He likes lights and sirens. And big trucks.”

The display is the latest in a string of community exercises demonstrating that, despite the COVID-19 pandemic, there is no shortage of kindness in Killingworth. For the past two months numerous persons within the town donated money, food, masks, protective equipment and, most important, their time to help others.

On this occasion it was the Killingworth Volunteer Fire Company that provided three vehicles, including a rescue truck; the Connecticut State Police that drove two cars and the Killingworth Ambulance Association that sent – what else? — its ambulance. Together they gave a child and his family a birthday present neither will forget.

“It was important for them,” said the KAA’s Lisa Anderson, who drove the association’s vehicle and was joined by EMT and board member Mary Robbenhaar-Fretz (both pictured left), “because it’s been a long year of growth for him, and they (his adoptive parents) wanted to do something special.”

So they did.

The idea began with Amanda Brackett, who heard of drive-by celebrations and wondered if she could get something similar for Zion. So she contacted Anderson, who is a friend, and asked her if an ambulance could be driven past her home. She not only agreed but reached out to the Fire Company to gauge its interest … and the next thing you know there’s a parade of vehicles on Chittenden.

And one happy child.

It’s the second time this month the KAA has done something like this. Two weeks ago it joined the KVFC for a neighborhood parade of vehicles that included drive-by thanks to the Rustic Barn and LaForesta, as well as another child’s birthday celebration.

“I would like to thank Chief (Richard) Bauer at the Fire Company and his crew for helping make the day special for Zion,” said Anderson. “These are a new type of requests we’re seeing, due to not being able to have ‘normal’ birthday celebrations. A lot of towns are doing it, and, yes, I would say it’s COVID- related. Parents are trying to make a special day special in these times.”

The Bracketts just succeeded.

 

 

KAA scholarship alert: Deadline nears for high-school seniors

(IMPORTANT: Applications are available within the text of this story)

Attention, high-school seniors from Killingworth: The deadline to apply for this year’s Killingworth Ambulance Association scholarships is Friday, May 15. So there’s still time to act.

There’s just not much of it.

Originally, the KAA scheduled the deadline for mid-April, which was the date in the past. But it postponed it one month to accomodate for the disruption created within our schools by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now that deadline is like high-school graduation: It’s approaching rapidly.

Applications are available to graduating seniors who are residents of Killingworth and enrolled in private or public high schools. To qualify for a scholarship, applicants must plan on attending a continuing-institution (two or four years) and have been accepted at a school. They also must major in the medical, emergency services (fire, police, etc.) or other allied fields, have performed community service and maintained a GPA of at least 3.0.

Certificates of scholarships will be awarded at the end of the school year. In the past two years, the KAA awarded scholarships to 11 graduating seniors now enrolled in colleges across the country.

NOTE: In addition to moving the deadline for applications, the KAA also changed the procedure to make it more convenient for students. Instead of filling out applications by hand and delivering them to a school’s guidance department, applicants may now complete them on-line and submit them by computer to the KAA.

Instructions are included within the attached application found here:

Face shields donated as “thanks to the heroes on the front lines”

(Pictured above: KAA vice president and EMT Marguerite Haaga with one of 50 face shields)

A smart man once said, “It’s kindness that helps people cope with crisis.” Seldom have those words resonated as they do here and now.

Random acts of kindness have been so evident in and around Killingworth during the COVID-19 lockdown that they’re no longer random. They’re frequent, and they’re everywhere … from Annette Sachs Cook handing out free face masks at the waste transfer station … to La Foresta Restaurant donating food to 600 persons at the Beechwood retirement community … to the posting of hand-made “Thank You” signs throughout the area.

Now comes this.

For the fifth time in the last five weeks, the Killingworth Ambulance Association has been the recipient of a gracious – and necessary — donation from a town resident. Larry Anderson, a PMO manager within the Research, Development and Engineering division of inLine Plastics, this week gave the association 50 clear plastic face shields to help with its supply of PPE during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Anderson wasn’t asked, nor was he pushed. He did it because … well, let him explain.

“When we saw the COVID virus hitting, a number of us (at inLine) got frustrated and said, ‘What can we do to help?’ “ he said. “We wanted to do our part. We didn’t want to sit here helplessly. We wanted to do something.”

So they did.

Tom Orkisz, owner of inLine Plastics, had read an article detailing how NYU developed a design for open-source face shields to protect front-line healthcare workers, and he pointed Anderson and his co-workers in that direction. After research and contact with companies involved in the production of shields, they decided to give it a try.

Only with one caveat.

“We wanted to do it on a donation basis,” Anderson said. “It’s all done on personal time.”

That’s important to note. Where some companies retooled their businesses to make and market plastic shields, inLine has not.  The company is a successful manufacturer of safe, hygienic and leak-proof food packaging that includes the Safe-T-Fresh line, and it hasn’t shifted its emphasis during the COVID-19 alert.

It has, however, expanded it.

“We’re not trying to develop a new product line,” said Anderson. “This is on a pure donation basis.”

Assembly is done by volunteers, with employees taking kits home for the weekend, then returning Monday with finished products. Because a shield can take a minute to construct, Anderson said, it’s not unusual for an individual to return with “a couple hundred.”

When the process began, inLine volunteers were urged to contact healthcare groups or first responders within their geographic locales to see if they were interested. So Anderson reached out to the KAA and asked.

It was.

The shields, part of what Anderson estimated as 1,500-2,000 distributed by inLine, were picked up earlier this week and included a note that read, “Thanks to you and all the heroes on the front lines of COVID-19. This is a difficult time and we know that you and your team are working diligently to keep us safe.”

But the KAA is hardly alone. Hospitals in Bridgeport, Norwalk, UConn and Yale have been contacted. EMS groups throughout the state have been, too, with Anderson saying he plans to drop off 100 shields with the Madison Fire Department. He would’ve done the same with Killingworth, he said, but, like others, he didn’t know the Volunteer Fire Company and Ambulance Association were separate entities.

“We will happily make 10,000 or 20,000 more for others if there’s the demand,” he said. “We’re just trying to figure out where our market is for these donations.”

They just did. And the KAA is as grateful as it was when it received a donation last week … and the week before that … and the week before that … and …

“The donations ae heartwarming,” said Dan O’Sullivan, president of the KAA. “Beyond the ones that protect us and make us safer, they tell us we are not alone … that we are all in this together. I’m amazed at the generosity and creativity of people finding ways they can help.”

La Foresta donates dinners; “This comes from the heart,” Lulaj says

(Pictured above, L-R:  The KAA’s Mike Haaga and Francesco Lulaj, owner of La Foresta)

The Killingworth Ambulance Association is used to serving the community. It is not used to the community serving the KAA. But that’s exactly what happened Thursday afternoon.

Literally.

Francesco Lulaj, owner of La Foresta Restaurant, showed up at the ambulance association’s headquarters to serve EMTs with 30 bags of donated dinners prepared and cooked earlier that day. Each bag contained two plastic dishes with meals straight off the La Foresta menu and fresh out of its kitchen.

There was home-cooked manicotti, with ricotta cheese and tomato sauce. There were home-made meatballs. And there was sea bass Milanese, with capers and lemon sauce sitting on a bed of yellow rice. In short, there was enough in each bag to feed two or three customers.

Only these meals didn’t come with a bill. They came with an expression of gratitude.

“You guys donate your time and expertise,” Lulaj said, taking a break from handing out meals with Mike Haaga, the KAA’s chief of service. “You’re amazing. This is just a small thing I’m doing. What you go through is above and beyond.”

Lulaj’s contribution is no small thing. The dinners took an estimated eight hours from start to finish and were prepared without 26 of La Foresta’s employees, laid off because of the COVID-19 alert. In their place, Lulaj called on three persons to assist, including his chef.

Nor was Lulaj’s contribution unusual. The previous week he dropped off 65 bags of meals to feed the Killingworth Volunteer Fire Company. And the week before that, he went door-to-door in the Beechwood retirement community, delivering food to 600 people. The dinners took three to four days to prepare and another four hours to deliver.

“It’s not about the food,” he said. “It’s a gesture through human contact. It’s something for somebody who’s really in need.”

Then he paused.

“And next week,” he promised, “we’re going to be someplace else.”

So what gives? No, it’s more like who gives. Killingworth’s residents, that’s who. Last weekend, it was Andrea Freibauer of Andie’s Cookies dropping off two-to-three pounds of cookies with the KAA. The week before, it was an anonymous donor delivering 250 protective face masks. And in late March it was Heidi Giaccone donating 10 R-95 masks she found in her family’s basement.

Now this.

“As a community,” said Lulaj, who last week donated 150 face masks to the KVFC, “we should pay attention to people who donate their time. I donate food. Somebody else donates money. It’s all OK. Your time is more valuable than anything else, yet that’s what (the KAA) does.. You stay away from your family, wake up in the middle of the night – maybe 1 or 2 in the morning — and drive sick people to the hospital. I am very appreciative of what you do for our town.”

Lulaj said he wanted to demonstrate that appreciation and, naturally, thought of donating food. In six years of operating La Foresta in Killingworth, he provided the local fire company with meals at regular intervals, a practice he began when the KVFC alleviated his concerns about a potential fire hazard shortly after the restaurant’s opening.

But he’d never reached out to the KAA. Until this week.

““Honestly,” Lulaj said, “I thought they were the same people. It never came to my mind that they were different.”

It’s a common misperception. When he realized his mistake, he telephoned Haaga Wednesday to make amends — asking if he could donate meals the following afternoon. When Haaga jumped at the offer, Lulaj asked how many dinners he would like. Haaga said 25. Lulaj dropped off 30.

“This is a great community,” Haaga said, shaking his head. “Everybody takes care of everybody.”

But the KAA is supposed to take care of everybody because … well, because that’s what it does. The community isn’t supposed to take care of the KAA. Yet that’s what it’s doing amid the COVID-19 pandemic, with random acts of kindness the new normal.

Lulaj is the latest example.

“People don’t understand how much we are saving by (volunteers) donating their time to take care of us,” he said. “The same thing with the Fire Department. We take it for granted, and that’s not a good thing. We have to show the younger generation that if you volunteer you’re making your community safer and better. That’s how we take care of each other, and this is my way of showing my appreciation for what you do. This comes from the heart.”