Small Company Hopes Donation Makes Big Connection With GIs
By Sgt. 1st Class Doug Sample, USA
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, July 9, 2004 -- A small Indiana telecommunications company is
thanking service members for helping keep America free by donating thousands of
prepaid calling cards to those injured in the war on terrorism.
Terry Ballantini, chief executive officer for Tellis Long Distance, said he
started "GI Connections" to show his gratitude to service members.
The company recently donated 2,500 prepaid cards, embossed with the words
"Thank You for Our Freedom," to the Fisher House Foundation, a nonprofit
organization that helps wounded and sick service members and their families by
providing lodging close to military medical treatment centers.
"I'm just extremely pleased and gratified that we can do something that makes a
difference," he said.
David Coker, executive director of the Fisher House Foundation, said the phone
cards will be a "tremendous morale booster" for hospitalized service members.
He added that the foundation plans to distribute the phone cards to military
and Veterans Affairs medical centers where injured service members are
receiving care.
"The cards will go to the servicemen and women and to their family members so
they can keep their families and friends up to date on the medical condition of
a loved one," he said.
Ballantini's will to help injured service members was spurred after a
discussion with his brother-in-law about donating prepaid cards to the
military.
After researching various groups that were helping the military, the brothers
learned that many of them were "grass-roots" organizations that were purchasing
phone cards from retail stores and providing them to service members.
"And what I decided to do, since we are a prepaid company and we set our own
rates and sell our own cards, was to design a card that thanked the military
for our freedom."
He then offered the special-edition prepaid phone cards to those groups at a
bargain rate.
For $3.75, service members get more than eight hours of talk time -- one of the
best deals on the prepaid market. Similar cards can cost as much as $5.00,
Ballantini said.
In addition, for every five cards sold, the company donates an extra 20-minute
card, he said. The company also takes care of all printing and design work, as
well as overnight shipping, he added.
A few organizations already have taken advantage of the offer.
Members of College Park Church in Indiana purchased 1,500 cards. And more
recently, a McLean Bible Church in Northern Virginia raised more than $19,000,
enough for more than 5,000 cards.
Ballantini, whose company has only 11 employees, said the prepaid card program
is not for profit, noting that after costs for printing and shipping "any
profits will be negligible." Instead, he said, he is just proud to be helping
the military in some way.
"I've never been in the military, but if there is anything that we can do, we
will do it," he said. "We really believe in this country and our military."
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