Naval air station launches Operation Homeport

David

Opinions are my own...
PREMO Member
Naval air station launches Operation Homeport

NAVAL AIR STATION PATUXENT RIVER, Md. – At some bases it’s known as the Host Family Initiative, and at others it’s Adopt a Sailor, but no matter what the program is called, the goal remains the same: Helping junior active-duty service members feel at home even when they’re not.

Currently in its infancy stages, Pax River’s Operation Homeport coordinators are seeking volunteer host families in the community to sponsor junior Sailors who are currently assigned to the naval air station. Host families do not have to have any military affiliation, but must live within 30 miles of the naval air station.

The sponsoring “family” can be a single individual, couples or a family with children, as long as the head of household is age 28 or older.

Operation Homeport is a way for Pax River’s Sailors who are away from home to create sustainable bonds with people who share similar interests and who genuinely care for their well-being.

To get involved, families will need to complete a Host Family Application location on the air station’s website, which includes a general-interest questionnaire. The application allows program coordinators to match Sailors with a host family based on common interests. Additionally, families can request to host more than one Sailor or even a specific Sailor.

Active-duty service members interested in sponsoring a Sailor must be at least an E-7 or higher if enlisted, or O-3 or higher if commissioned.

For more information on how to participate in Operation Homeport, call the Patuxent River Morale, Welfare and Recreation Department at 301-342-0942, or visit the installation’s website at www.cnic.navy.mil/Patuxent.
 

b23hqb

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
Sounds like a good program. Back in the day, long, long ago in the early 70's, military and civilian families, especially in the overseas community, participated in the same manner without official programs.

I, as a just out of high school sailor, at NCS Asmara Ethiopia (NKA), benefited from three families, one AF and two civilian that went over and beyond the call of friendliness for me and several of my buddies for two years hosting, integrating, and entertaining us into their circles.

I still maintain contact with all three groups, after 40 years, one family in VA, one in NC, and one just up the road from me here in Fl.

It meant a lot then, and still does today.:buddies:.
 
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