2008 Navy
Times Sailor of the Year
HM1 Tremaine Luster
Navy Reserve Forces
Command
New Orleans
Personal: He and wife Donikka
have two sons and a daughter.
NEW
ORLEANSHospital Corpsman 1st Class
Tremaine Luster is a busy man these days, as he
has been since arriving in the Big Easy nine
months ago.
Luster, the Navy
Times 2008 Sailor of the Year, serves as enlisted
detailer for more than 5,000 enlisted Navy
Reserve medical personnel, leads weekly remedial
physical fitness sessions at Navy Reserve Forces
Command in New Orleans, runs in road races in the
area, and visits local elementary schools to
encourage students to stay away from drugs as
part of Campaign Drug Free. He serves as his
command's sexual assault program coordinator and
has earned one bachelor's degree in health care
management and another in human resources
management.
"HM1 Luster
inspires me and others, with the level of
excellence and balance he brings, with all the
different things he's engaged," Command
Master Chief Daryl Green wrote in a nominating
statement. "Command mission, command
involvement, family, community he's the
complete package. And he does it all with a
humble attitude."
Luster's schedule
would be enough to tax the most salty chief, but
according to his command, Luster takes it in
stride and was prepared to do more when
another opportunity came along.
So now, on
Saturdays, Luster takes the wheel of a Navy van
and drives a group of shipmates to sites across
New Orleans, where the sailors pitch in on
construction and renovation efforts in
neighborhoods devastated by Hurricane Katrina
nearly three years ago.
In prior tours,
Luster said, he focused more on work, school and
family, but seeing the storm's effect led him to
redouble his efforts.
"Before I got
here, I didn't do a lot of volunteering,"
Luster said. "But when I did get here and
saw the devastation that still remained even two
years [after Hurricane Katrina], I just wanted to
see what I can do to help."
That desire led him
to team with five other first class petty
officers to start a community outreach program
that used sailors stationed in New Orleans as a
volunteer labor pool. One sailor led efforts to
help a local hospital, another supported a local
high school. Luster, who says he never worked in
construction until now, wanted to fix homes.
"In areas past
the 9th Ward, it is still pretty bad from
Katrina," Luster said. "Those houses
still need a lot of rehabilitation. Any little
part that we can participate in really
helps."
The van came later,
when he saw that driving volunteers to the
worksite on Saturday raised attendance.
"That way there
is no excuse," he said. "We all carpool
in the van. We are able to get more people out
when we do that.
"I am looking
to expand it to two Saturdays per month," he
said, adding that the sailors also recondition
old doors, toilets and sinks, then sell them and
donate the proceeds to local charities.
FULL-TIME
RESERVIST FOR 12 YEARS
Luster, a Fleet
Marine Force corpsman, has been a full-time Navy
reservist for 12 years. Before arriving at New
Orleans, he completed tours at Naval Operational
Support Center Pensacola, Fla.; Marine Corps
Reserve Center Dayton, Ohio; Reserve Liaison
Office Portsmouth, Va.; and Reserve Center
Brunswick, Maine.
Luster credits the
experiences of his family members with giving him
the drive to push himself professionally and
academically.
"I have a
brother currently incarcerated," he said.
"He never finished high school. I have eight
half-brothers and -sisters who I am very close
with. Two of them graduated [high school]. The
rest never finished. That leads to certain things
you have to do to survive that you normally
wouldn't want to do."
He said other family
members, especially his father, provided an
example of what not to do.
"I looked at
him and said, I didn't want to be that way. I
wanted to be more responsible. That led me to the
military to pay for college because I knew my
parents couldn't do it."
By
Chris Amos
camos@militarytimes.com
CITATION
2008 NAVY
TIMES SAILOR OF THE YEAR
HM1 TREMAINE L. LUSTER
Hospital Corpsman
1st Class Tremaine L. Luster has been a busy man
since arriving at the Navy Reserve Forces Command
in New Orleans. As the enlisted detailer for more
than 5,000 enlisted Navy Reserve medical
personnel, he leads weekly remedial physical
fitness sessions, runs in local road races,
coaches his son's little league basketball team,
and visits local elementary schools to encourage
students to stay away from drugs as part of
Campaign Drug Free.
According to his
chain of command, Petty Officer Luster takes his
taxing schedule in stride -- yet, he is always
prepared to do more when another opportunity
comes along. In prior tours, he focused more on
work, school (as he has earned 2 bachelors
degrees) and family, but seeing the after-effect
of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans led him to
redouble his efforts -- to see what he could do
to help.
That desire led him
to team with five other petty officers first
class to start a community outreach program that
utilizes sailors stationed in New Orleans as a
volunteer labor pool to assist at a local
hospital and support a local high school. Petty
Officer Luster has never worked in construction,
yet he wanted to fix homes, especially those
still in pretty bad shape from the storm of three
years ago. That led him to devise a plan where he
drives a group of shipmates on Saturdays to sites
around New Orleans, for the sailors to pitch in
on construction and renovation efforts in the
many devastated neighborhoods. This idea evolved
when he saw that van-pooling raised volunteer
attendance of the sailors within the communities
and alleviated any excuses from assisting. And
this volunteer outreach program is still
expanding.
Overall, Petty
Officer Luster serves as an inspiration to others
about being involved in your command, your family
and your community, and he does it all with a
humble attitude. He credits his childhood days in
Dayton Ohio and the experiences of growing up in
a large family with learning how to give back and
help others survive.
He truly
leads by example, on- and off-duty, and that is
why Petty Officer Tremaine L. Luster is being
honored as the 2008 Navy Times Sailor of the
Year.
|