Published November 22, 2008 02:06 pm - Rocky Bridges goes beyond the call of duty because “it’s too easy to do the right thing.”
Bridges builds future by helping others
Port Arthur News 2008 Citizen of the Year finalist
The Port Arthur News
By Mary Meaux
The News staff writer
For the most part police officers spend their day fighting crime.
In between calls they may fill out required paperwork, return phone messages and fulfill the task of “to protect and serve.”
But Rocky Bridges goes beyond the call of duty because “it’s too easy to do the right thing.”
The veteran Port Arthur Police officer makes a special trip to a home on Fourth Street near Lakeshore Drive to check on the progress of the restoration of a home. The two-story structure was severely damaged during Hurricane Rita in 2005 making the second floor uninhabitable. The 11 occupants of the home include a 57-year-old widow and her 10 children lived in the damaged bottom floor of the home until Bridges’ intervention.
Bridges learned of the widow’s plight last year when searching for a family to help at Christmas. Through donations and the department’s Blue Santa program the officer was able to procure food and gifts for the family. But when he arrived at the home he was taken aback.
“When I saw the condition of the house ... no one should have to live like that, whether on their own choosing or the path they chose,” he said.
Then, on Christmas Eve 2007 the officer made a promise to Knight that within one year she would be back in her home.
Through his vast list on contacts Bridges found a faith based organization who would come in and repair the home. Local businesses donated materials and South East Texas Interfaith Organization along with Christian Reformed World Relief Committee, provided skilled and unskilled labor.
But the major undertaking at Knights’s home isn’t the only time Bridges has helped his fellow man. Every year he searches for one to two families to donate to during the holidays. This year he plans to feed 100 families for Thanksgiving in four areas hit by Hurricane Ike.
“He is the most unselfish person I know,” his wife Trina Bridges said.
Bridges works at Central Mall on weekends and turned over a small paycheck to an employee at the mall who is a single mother, his wife said.
An East Texas native, Bridges pulls from his own wallet and helps to feed the needy.
“There’s a side of me that I keep to myself,” he said softly. “There’s a homeless man on the West Side, I try to go by and feed him every day. It’s too easy to do the right thing. I’ve always been this way. For the small handful of people who have taken the opportunity to known me, they know I’m not the cold hearted, armor wearing, stern person they see.”