Unsung Heroes
Listen here:
From the Laconia Daily Sun - March 13, 2018
Tom Salatiello has served Sanbornton well for almost 40 years, elect him today
To The Daily Sun,
Tom Salatiello is ending his political retirement to run for Sanbornton selectman. No one is more qualified. For almost 40 years, Tom served the town as our state representative (five terms), as our selectman (four terms), and as our representative to the Winnisquam Regional School Board.
Never afraid to speak his mind, Tom relies on two basic principles: respect for his constituents (including the elderly and the poor) and frugality. His encyclopedic knowledge of town government is respected by Republicans, Democrats, and Independents alike.
On Tuesday, March 13, please write in Tom Salatiello for Sanbornton selectman.
Stephen Tessler
Sanbornton
Tom Salatiello has served Sanbornton well for almost 40 years, elect him today
To The Daily Sun,
Tom Salatiello is ending his political retirement to run for Sanbornton selectman. No one is more qualified. For almost 40 years, Tom served the town as our state representative (five terms), as our selectman (four terms), and as our representative to the Winnisquam Regional School Board.
Never afraid to speak his mind, Tom relies on two basic principles: respect for his constituents (including the elderly and the poor) and frugality. His encyclopedic knowledge of town government is respected by Republicans, Democrats, and Independents alike.
On Tuesday, March 13, please write in Tom Salatiello for Sanbornton selectman.
Stephen Tessler
Sanbornton
EPISODE 16 launches the beginning of a series sub-titled "Unsung Heroes". In this episode we meet Tom Salatiello who has served at almost every level of state and local government and been a state employee for almost 50 years at the NH Department of Health and Human Services.
Tom Salatiello and
The Mountains He's Moved
From going
undercover as a dishwasher to confirm
allegations of abuse in a group home in northern New Hampshire, to teaching his
clients and constituents how to navigate the bureaucracy, Tom Salatiello has
lived a life of service to his fellow men and women.
In his first year in
Seminary, in Worchester Massachusetts, Tom discovered that the life of a priest
was not his calling but he knew right then that helping people would determine
the course of his life. He chose social work and within a few years landed in
New Hampshire at the Department of Health and Human Services.
This fall, he will
begin his 49th year at HHS. At 75 years old he could have retired ten years
ago. Today in the midst of a global pandemic he could be social-isolating but
to Tom that would mean he could not serve the people he loves and someone else
with a young family, or older parents, would need to be doing what he is doing.
So he persists. Nothing seems to stop Tom Salatiello, not even pancreatic
cancer that struck him nearly a decade ago and that he battles to this day.
That’s why this
episode of New Hampshire Secrets, Legends and Lore brings you the first in what
I hope will be an ongoing series of stories called "unsung heroes"
and why I begin this series with one of New Hampshire's greatest unsung heroes,
Tom Salatiello of Sanbornton.
Moonlight On the Stone House |
Sometimes I think
Tom Salatiello is fueled by nothing more than pure love. In a world filled with
partisanship, tribalism, bickering and anger he reminds us all that we humans
have so much more that unites us than divides us. Every day for Tom Salatiello
is another day when he draws the circle of humanity and love wider and wider to
help unite us - in spite of our differences.
If you would like to
suggest someone we should recognize, go to the show notes and send me an email
with your suggestions and reasons. NHSecrets.blogspot.com . There you can also
contribute to this podcast if you feel moved to do that as well.
Thank you for
listening we'll be back again soon with another episode of NH Secrets, Legends
and Lore.
Tom, Salatiello, NH, New Hampshire, State Representative, Selectman, State Employee, School Board, Winnisquam, Sanbornton, HHS, Social Work
No comments:
Post a Comment