Date: October 22, 2009
The cold and the rain could not dampen the enthusiasm in Spc. Jason Schulz's heart.
A few yards behind Schulz, dozens of volunteers were helping construct a 2,350-square-foot
home specifically designed for him by the non-profit Homes for our Troops.
When completed, the home in an upscale neighborhood in Eagle will feature counters, showers,
doorways and other amenities suited for a man with Schulz's challenges. Almost two years ago -
Nov. 7, 2007 - Schulz was an active-duty Soldier, an Abrams tank mechanic returning from a vehicle
recover mission in Mosul, Iraq when a roadside bomb ripped through the salvage and recover wrecker
he was riding in. The blast nearly severed his right hand and took both legs.
Among the volunteers were 30 cadets from Challenge Academy at Fort McCoy - current students in
the program Schulz himself graduated from in 2004, as a 17-year-old from West Allis.
"I was just having a hard time in high school," he said.
His mother, Teresa Amick, elaborated.
"He was on a bad road," she explained. "Gang stuff, hanging around the wrong people. He was
stabbed in the leg one time and wouldn't tell me who did it. He had no structure."
That changed at Challenge Academy, which offers high school dropouts or habitual truants the
chance to earn their high school equivalency diploma, learn life and job skills as well as how
to become responsible citizens.
"It really helps a lot of people out," Schulz said. "It really helped me out. It helped me
graduate high school, taught me values and leadership."
"He said when he went there, he learned what real morals were," his mother added. "He was very,
very proud of himself - he got self-esteem. We kept on him to do something. He decided to join
the Army at 17."
Schulz told the visiting cadets that basic training was "a walk in the park" after attending the
Academy.
"It was a good experience," he said of the Academy. "I wouldn't trade it for anything. Trust me -
you'll be a better person."
Academy Deputy Director Peter Blum said that a project such as this matches up well with one of
the core principles cadets learn - community service.
"It's what we call a 'high payoff,'" Blum said. "They're helping out a fellow cadet who walked
in their shoes. It couldn't fit any better."
Cadet Stewart Miller, 17, agreed.
"This is very important," he said. "Jason is our brother. He came to the Academy with the same
problems, and that makes him family. We help out our brothers and sisters."
"It's always good to help a fellow cadet," said Cadet Mark Zimmerman. "He obviously needs this
[house] very much."
Amick said this is why she called the Academy to ask for their help during the three-day build-up.
"I wouldn't have called if it didn't mean so much," she said. "This is something [Jason] would
have done. They learned to look out for each other at Challenge Academy. That's something that
stayed with him."
Schulz and his wife Polina, an Army specialist at Fort Sam Houston in Texas, are expecting their
first child in two months. He said he wants to go to college, and intends to get a power wheelchair
when their daughter is born.
"I can't hold her and move around at the same time in this chair," he explained.
Schulz has yet to receive his prosthetics, and still uses a manual wheelchair. He said he is
looking forward to walking again when he receives his prosthetics. His mother said she has seen
the challenges her son faces in a conventional home.
"It's very heart-warming to know he'll have a roof over his head the rest of his life," she said.
That's because the house, estimated to cost $275,000, will not cost Schulz a cent. According to
Larry Archer, Build Brigade construction manager for Homes for our Troops, each home is built with
volunteer labor and donated materials.
"I enjoy my freedom very much," said Archer, who has been with Homes for our Troops the past two
years. "[This is] my way of giving back."
Blum said that is a message he wants his cadets to take away from this experience.
"This fits in with what we're trying to get these kids to understand," he said. "In the past
they'd been taking from society, and now they're giving of themselves."
Click To View High-Resolution Photo
Cadets from the Challenge Academy program at Fort McCoy lend a hand Oct. 22 during a Homes for our Troops
construction project. The home is being built for Jason Schulz, a disabled Operation Iraqi Freedom veteran and
a 2004 Challenge Academy graduate. Wisconsin Army National Guard photo by Sgt. 1st Class Vaughn R. Larson
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Click To View High-Resolution Photo
Cadets from the Challenge Academy program at Fort McCoy lend a hand Oct. 22 during a Homes for our Troops
construction project by moving lumber closer to the construction site. The home is being built for Jason Schulz,
a disabled Operation Iraqi Freedom veteran and a 2004 Challenge Academy graduate. Wisconsin Army National Guard
photo by Sgt. 1st Class Vaughn R. Larson
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