Original Article Written by me on January 15, 2011, published by the New York Islanders Official Website
If you ask anyone what the most important aspect to any successful  organization is, they would probably tell you one word: teamwork. Its  importance can never be understated and in the case of Mike Mulhall,  Paige Malone and Jamie Malone, their teamwork with Camp Anchor was a big  reason for the success of that organization. The camp’s name is an  acronym for Answering the Needs of Citizens with Handicaps through  Organized Recreation.
The Malone sisters and Mulhall had been working with Camp Anchor, a  year-round recreation social program for children and adults with  special needs supported by the town of Hempstead, N.Y., since they were  about 14 years old. They worked there until their lives were tragically  taken last July 15 in a horrific car accident while on their way to help  the children who they loved to spend their summers with.
“Everyone loved Mike so much, he was the greatest guy,” said the camp’s  coordinator Joe Lentini. “It was a tremendous loss losing him. Not only  was he a co-worker, but also he was a friend to so many people. For us  he was like one of our kids. He had been working for us since he was 14  as a volunteer and through college too. He just graduated college and  became a specialist at the camp. Jamie and Paige were similar  situations, had worked there for many years.”
Camp Anchor runs year-round, and during the school year they run  programs every day from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. including weekends. During the  summer they have a six-week summer day camp in Lido Beach, N.Y., where  the kids are transported to from all parts of the town of Hempstead.  They have an array of recreational activities during a seven period day  that include art, music, sports, fitness, and aquatics with help from  their convenient beach side location. The camp gives the parents a rest  from the difficult task of raising their children and it gives kids a  social outlet.
Mulhall didn’t only give his love to these kids; he also shared it with  his love for the New York Islanders, his favorite team. When the  Islanders heard about this, it prompted the team to host a Mike Mulhall  Night for Thursday night’s contest against the Ottawa Senators to honor  his life. 
    
“Mike would’ve loved it,” Lentini said. “Any opportunity to honor them,  show them they’re still with us and we think about them all the time is a  good thing. We are at the part of the mourning stages of celebrating  their lives. That is the reason this night was so important for the  camp.”
They wanted to be able to bring everyone together to honor Mulhall, who  played college hockey at the University of Scranton, and they couldn’t  think of a better way to do so than at the arena of his favorite hockey  team. Most of Mulhall’s very large family was in attendance for the  event, as well as many of the Camp Anchor staff and participants. “It  means a lot for all of us to come together to honor him,” Lentini said.
On Thursday night, the Camp Anchor team stationed themselves on the  concourse in hopes of garnering the attention of other Islander fans to  ask them to donate money to the Anchor Building Fund, a non-profit  organization raising money to build a recreation center at the camp  facility. The parents and Rotary District 7250 have raised $1 million  and the Town of Hempstead is chipping in $6 million, leaving Camp Anchor  close to the amount they need to start building the recreation center.  The building will include a gym, stage, kitchen, dining area, computer  room, handicapped accessible toilets, and many other essentials.
The camp needs this building to further their cause of helping these  special needs people and to give them the full experience. During the  school year they have to rent space from schools and, as a result, have  to work around that school’s schedule, but when there is an event at  that school, the camp has to look elsewhere for their activities. It is  becoming increasingly difficult to transport the kids at a moment’s  notice. 
The summer weather also causes some concern. When the weather is  dangerous, the kids can be transported to the movie theaters or on field  trips, but only if the camp knows in advance about incoming inclement  weather. If the weather changes rapidly, it is very difficult to get the  kids out, leaving a very precarious situation for everyone involved. 
“We never get enough space for what our needs are because we are so  big,” Lentini said. “We really need our own recreation center and we’ve  been fundraising for that for the last three years. The center will be  named after Paige, Jamie and Mike.”
The camp will do anything to keep the memory of these prized individuals  alive. “We did scholarships through fundraising in their name and the  building will be named after them. Anything we can do to move forward  with that is a great thing and this is a night that can help make that  happen,” Lentini stated.
The New York Islanders work with groups and foundations such as Camp  Anchor to give them the exposure necessary to raise enough money and to  make others aware of the needs of these people. If you would like to  make a donation to help get this recreation center started, you can  forward any check to:
Rotary District 7250 Foundation
Att: Anchor Program
P.O. Box 202
Glen Head, NY 11545
or
Camp Anchor Parent Association
630 Lido Beach
Lido Beach, NY 11561
 
 
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