Extreme makeover, Key Peninsula style:
Volunteers band to help injured woman
By Danna Webster, KP News
On a popular
television show, an extreme makeover of a family home is
achieved in seven days with a crew of hundreds of
people. Out here on the Key Peninsula, a similarly
miraculous makeover was achieved for Sue Gorman’s home
in two days with a few more than one hundred volunteers.

Sue Gorman leads Lt. Bill
Sawaya, Fire District 16
paramedic who responded to her rescue,
around her
“new” home.
Photo by Danna Webster |
When the work was done, television trucks, newspaper
reporters, cameras and microphones all showed up to
record the revelation of a complete makeover.
Gorman
suffered a brutal dog attack in her Minterbrook Homes
neighborhood on Aug. 21. She was asleep when two pit
bulls entered her home through the sliding door on her
back porch. It was left partially open for her service
dog, Misty and for Romeo, a neighbor’s Jack Russell
Terrier, who often stayed with Gorman when his family
was away from home. Romeo was killed in the attack.
Gorman and Misty escaped from the house.

Sue Gorman with Rex, who was given to the
neighbor
family whose Jack Russell Terrier was killed
in the attack.
Photo by Danna Webster |
“It was the
most vicious animal attack I’ve seen,” says Lt. Bill
Sawaya, Fire District 16 paramedic who responded to the
call. “It was lucky she put her hands up to guard
herself, or it would have been her throat and that would
be life threatening.”
Gorman’s
story came to the attention of the local Safe Street
Mobilization Specialist Andrea Jerabek and to
construction contractor Bruce Bodine, whose
organization, Need-A-Break, offers home repair
assistance. Jerabek had just started the third week on
her new job and her main task was to find office space.
When she went to Gorman’s home and saw the damage, her
priorities took a drastic shift. She began organizing
help to clean the house. She admits it was an extremely
difficult undertaking, almost overwhelming.
At about the
same time Need-A-Break learned that a fence was needed
to secure Gorman’s property. Bodine contacted Jerabek
and said he would like to help with the fence. When Bodine visited Gorman’s home, it was clear to him that
much more than a fence was needed. The house was a mess.
Rooms were splattered with blood. Pepper spray residue
contaminated the furnishings. It had been difficult for
the emergency rescue crew to locate the house because
the shrub and brush had grown over the house numbers.
What was needed was an extreme makeover. That was a new
dimension for Bodine’s organization, but he decided to
join Jerabek and make it happen.

Volunteers hang a new door on the house.
Photo by Danna Webster |
Bodine’s
daughter, Julie, began working with Jerabek to organize
volunteers. Bodine contacted the many professional
contractors, painters and roofers who had worked with
him previously on home repair projects. On the second
weekend in September, nearly 150 volunteer workers
showed up to work with the truckloads of tools and
equipment belonging to the professional team. In two
days, they achieved an extreme makeover from roof to
roots. All new shingles, carpet, cupboards, appliances,
light fixtures, furniture, drapes, windows, doors, a
custom-made doggie door, patio, driveway,
inside and outside paint, flowered paths, pruned trees,
a landscaped corner lot with 30 bird houses, and a cedar
fence were ready to surprise Gorman on her homecoming by
5 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 9.
A new storm
door was hung and the glass was shined as the car
bringing Gorman home turned down her street. The driver
was Gorman’s good friend, Leana Beasley, who made her
wear a blindfold and told her to expect a big surprise.
Beasley led Gorman through a hushed crowd to stand
before a huge bus blocking the view to her house. When
the blindfold was lifted, her first surprise was the
size of the “welcome home” crowd. Many of them were the
volunteers who had worked on her house for the past two
days. As she tried to adjust to the people and a battery
of cameras, the crowd shouted, “Driver, move this bus!”
The diesel engine roared, the bus drove away, and there
was Gorman’s beautiful home welcoming her.

. The crew of volunteers works on the
outside of the house,
which got a new door and windows, shingles,
patio as well as
an interior makeover.
Photo by Danna Webster |
Gorman
walked shakily up the new concrete drive. “It’s like my
dream home,” she said. Lt. Sawaya was there to greet
Gorman. She tucked her arm under the paramedic’s and led
him around the front yard to see the pruned trees, new
flower beds and sculptured paths. “She expressed her
gratitude to the fire department, said she had been
really scared and was glad to see us pull up,” Sawaya
says. “She commented she never knew she had so many
friends in the neighborhood, never felt so cared for in
her life. For her, it was overwhelming.”
Out on the
street, a jubilant crowd shared stories of the work days
and the miraculous changes to the house. Mostly
strangers to one another, they were from Tacoma, Gig
Harbor and the Key Peninsula. All were inspired to help
a woman erase a nightmare experience and replace it with
the testimony of good will. One of the workers, Mark
Wagnar, was a friend of Bodine from the Life Center
church in Tacoma and had worked with him before. “He’s
my hero,” Wagnar said while watching Bodine shake hands
and thank the volunteer workers. “He’s as good a person
as they come.”

The house, with brand new landscape, after
the work is
complete.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
Andrea
Jerabek’s husband, Edward, was one of the volunteers.
The Safe Streets office is temporarily located in their
Gig Harbor home. He found his wife’s first month on the
job at Safe Streets remarkable. “I’m very proud of her.
She’s taken this whole thing by storm,” he says.
Gorman
suffers recurring nightmares and sometimes the
television triggers frightening memories. She is afraid
because the dogs have not been surrendered for
destruction but remain at the Humane Society. Gorman and
Beasley are actively advocating that Layla’s Law, RCW
9.91.170, be enforced with regard to this attack.
According to Beasley, the law protects the safety of
service dogs and their disabled owners. Conviction of
breaking Layla’s law would find the dogs’ owners
responsible for the full restitution of all damages to
Gorman, her dog, her home, and her personal property.
As for
Jerabek’s first experience with Safe Streets, an
organization she had never heard of until they hired
her, she says this “project” was all about on-the-job
training. “I don’t want to take a whole lot of credit.
I’ve just been falling into things,” she says. “This is
like a separate event. This is about Sue… to come home,
to come to a safe home.”

Sue Gorman sees her home made over for the
first time
after the crowd yelled, “Move that bus!” and
her blindfold was
removed. Her friend, Leana Beasley, and
Bruce Bodine, who
helped organize the makeover, lead her to
the house while
surrounded by television cameras.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
The first
month was a “whirlwind” for Jerabek but she says the
real job with
Safe Streets
hasn’t even begun. “This was not an isolated incident
about loose dogs and vicious dogs,” she says. “I need to
get people to the table — the sheriff, law enforcement
and community leaders — and ask what we can do for the
long haul. Having a dog running loose is not acceptable,
no matter how nice the dog.”
The long
haul will require community awareness and community
commitment. “That’s education and education is slow,”
Jerabek says.
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