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Steamfitters Uniting to Find Cure for Girl Battling Spinal Muscular Atrophy

Members of Steamfitters Local 638 Union to be honored at Thursday fundraiser in Long Island City for Sophia’s Cure Foundation.

Three-year old Sophia Gaynor of Wantagh is beating the odds in her battle with a terminal and aggressive disease called Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) and the Steamfitters Local 638 Union where her father works is doing their part to make sure she continues to live.

Most children who suffer from SMA Type 1 do not reach the age of two but Gaynor, who resides in the North Bellmore School District, has lived nearly twice that long. Gaynor, who is now totally paralyzed and cannot swallow or speak, earlier this month was the first child to enter the new Freedom Tower where her father Vincent is currently working in his job as a steamfitter. Gaynor's steamfitter colleagues are uniting Thursday night for a fundraiser at Waters Edge in Long Island City aimed at finding a cure cure for SMA with proceeds benefiting the Sophia’s Cure Foundation

“Vincent has been a dedicated steamfitter for years and it was only natural that we join together, as a union and with others in our industry, to support Sophia’s Cure Foundation,” said Patrick Dolan, president, Enterprise Association of Steamfitters Local 638. “The Gaynor family has bravely fought against this terrible disease and we cannot let them do this alone. Steamfitters stick together.”

“Vincent and his family have worked tirelessly to raise money for a cure,” said Richard Roberts, Business Agent at Large, Enterprise Association of Steamfitters Local 638."The steamfitting community in New York is like a brotherhood and we are standing united with the Gaynor family in the fight against SMA.”

The fundraising dinner for the Sophia’s Cure Foundation will honor Dolan and Roberts for their dedication and support in finding a cure for SMA. To date, Dolan and Roberts and others in New York City's steamfitting industry have helped raise nearly $2.5 million for SMA research. 

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Thursday's fundraiser is being held as part of SMA Awareness Month. Gaynor was born on Feb., 27, 2009 as a normal and healthy child until her parents noticed that she stopped moving at two weeks of age. Several weeks later, Gaynor was diagnosed with SMA Type 1, a disease that ravages the body leading to acute paralysis and the need for respiratory support and a feeding tube.

Former American Idol contestant and Merrick resident Robbie Rosen brought attention to SMA and Sophia's Cure Foundation last year when he wrote a song in honor of Gaynor called "Make it Through" that he performed at a New York Islanders game. 

“The doctors told us she had a 50 percent chance of dying within the first six months,” said Vincent Gaynor. “We were devastated when we found out about the diagnosis and locked ourselves in our house for three days. We decided to stop feeling sorry for ourselves and decided to fight back against SMA.”

The Gaynor family decided to be proactive in finding a cure for their daughter by launching Sophia’s Cure Foundation. There is no treatment or cure yet for SMA yet, but the family is hopeful that groundbreaking research, partially funded by Sophia’s Cure, will lead to progress.

“Recognizing the battle we were facing, the Steamfitters Union threw a benefit for my family and I was fortunate enough to spend six months at home with her," Gaynor said. "You can’t put a price tag on that time that we spent together as a family." 

The union, with the support of Steamfitting Contractors at the Mechanical Contractors Association of New York, also arranged a transfer for Gaynor to work as shop steward at Long Island Jewish Hospital where a major construction project was underway and where Sophia was receiving treatment.

“As an industry it’s important that we stand with each other and help Vincent and his family fight for a cure,” said Tony Saparito, executive vice president of the Mechanical Contractors Association of New York. “We’ve all been inspired by the Gaynor family and their dedication the last three years.”

For more information about Thursday's fundraiser and Sophia’s Cure Foundation, log onto the organization's website.   

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Greg Bashaw May 20, 2013 at 12:50 am
Well for starters, why not give candidates 401K's and only pay a proportion of their benefits...HireRead More teachers and adm that actually live in our district...... Has anybody proposed dismantling the high school district......From the way I understand they have tried unsuccessfully to combine, well then how about saving moneu and splitting up the 3 high schools...This was we wont need 2 administrations...... I will try and I will think out of the box!
truth May 19, 2013 at 09:11 pm
You are going to do something that even Cuomo won't touch...pensions? Well, thank you forRead More recognizing the real problem that faces the taxpayers but how will you address the problem and not just promise?
Dan DeLilla May 18, 2013 at 10:40 pm
So Lu Scala never had any children so it might be safe to say you have never been to a PTA meetingRead More or a School Board meeting or a budget presentation so then you would have no idea how the money is spent good or bad. I'm sorry that your neighbors make more than you but like anything else you get what you pay for there are educational requirements for teaching and administration jobs, I'm sure you would be happy if all the school personnel could be replaced by minimum wage earners or better yet we could close all the schools after all you have been out of school for 40 years so you don't need them anymore, but thats not how it works. Why is always the uninformed that speak loudest and longest?
Lu Scala May 17, 2013 at 08:49 am
I never had any kids.. and am the last kid who went to to the Bellmore Merrick school system.....itsRead More been almost 40 years since I was a Mempham grad..and it is very disharting to hear that my many many high tax dollars..are not enought for these kids I have been sororting all these years!!! Who is getting all the money??? Its all bull.. aI live inbetween teachers.. how is it they can afford high end cars, housekeepers, landscapers, ect??????... the money is being spent in the WRONG WAYS TO THE TEACHERS, AND MOST OF ALL THE ADMISTRATION, THE SCHOOL BOARD ECT... I AM CALLING FOR A MASSIVE AUDIT AND GET0 per year.. they afe not worth any more then that.. THE MONEY BACK FROM ANYONE WHO WAS PAID MORE THEN $75,00....
patti May 16, 2013 at 08:28 pm
A bit of a surprise considering kids come home with a supply list a mile long (and average $40-$75).
Michael Ganci (Editor) May 14, 2013 at 01:34 pm
Can you edit above and add photo? Then I will post to top news! Thanks! MG