A local Marine is about to get a helping hand from an army of volunteers. On Friday, Jan. 6, Patuxent Habitat for Humanity (PHH) conducted a ground breaking ceremony at a Chaptico residence. The project will be the first in the local organizationโ€™s Gary Senese Memorial Veteran Repair Corps Program. The projectโ€™s goal is to renovate and expand to Getscher familyโ€™s home in order to accommodate Marine Lance Corporal Caleb Getscher, who was wounded in Afghanistan last summer. The young Marine is currently undergoing rehabilitation at Bethesda Naval Hospital.

According to PHH Executive Director Pamela Shubert, the construction of an accessible room for Caleb and a garage for his vehicle is expected to take 12 to 16 weeks. Shubert said last fall the organization applied for and received a $100,000 โ€œRepair Corpsโ€ grant from The Home Depot Foundation. The local chapter of the Veterans of Foreign Wars subsequently contacted her about Caleb. The Getscher project is the first in what Shubert hopes will be 10 projects to help the Patuxent areaโ€™s military veterans.

Habitat for Humanity requires project participation from the beneficiaries and Shubert indicated Calebโ€™s family and friends are prepared to join with hundreds of other volunteers to get the job done.

โ€œWeโ€™ll have a couple hundred volunteers,โ€ said Shubert. โ€œSome local Mennonites and Seabees from Pax River have volunteered.โ€ She added the septic field required for the expansion has been completed and the permit process will take another two weeks. Once that hurdle has been completed the work can start. Asked whether a heavy snowfall could challenge the project, Shubert replied, โ€œit depends whether itโ€™s under frame.โ€

Nearly 20 businesses and entities have contributed monetary and volunteer support to the project as well.

โ€œThis was easy to make a decision for us to get involved with,โ€ said Pete Green of Wyle Aerospace Group, one of the projectโ€™s corporate sponsors. โ€œWe feel a close kinship with wounded warriors.โ€

The project also received $600 from the familyโ€™s friends at Mechanicsville Elementary School. โ€œI just put a jar in the school office and then the jar just started to fill up,โ€ said Jamie Smith, who indicated she wanted to help out the Getscher family.

โ€œThis is a great day for the Marine community,โ€ said PHH Board of Directors member Dan Doherty. The local program serves as a tribute to Senese, a military veteran, Compton resident and PHH volunteer, who died la