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Tunnel to Towers draws in crowd for memorial run
anthony locks
Anthony Locks routinely runs Tunnel to Tower races across the country. He came to the Newman event and ran the race in his gear and carrying an American flag. - photo by Dan Gomes

Runners and walkers alike arose early on Aug. 31 to take part in the annual Tunnel to Towers 5K run and walk.

The event is hosted by the Tunnel to Towers Foundation, which was created in the memory of New York Firefighter Stephen Siller with the mission of assisting catastrophically injured veterans and first responders, fallen first responder families, and Gold Star families. 

The Tunnel to Towers Foundation has previously assisted the family of fallen Newman Police Cpl. Ronil Singh.

Taking first place in this year’s race was Anthony Cortes, 30. He was followed by Patricio Kearney, who took 2nd place. The 17-year-old is a standout on the cross country team at Orestimba High School.

The race also featured some first responders running in full gear. The first to cross the finish line of those runners was Alexander Diaz, a Newman firefighter.

Joining this year’s race was Anthony Locks, a fireman that runs in his turnout gear and carries an American flag. Locks serves as a goodwill ambassador for the event.

On Sept. 11, 2001, Siller had completed his shift with Brooklyn Squad 1 when he heard news of an airplane hitting the North Tower of the World Trade Center. Siller returned to Squad 1 to gather his gear and drove to the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel, only to find it had been closed. With his 60 pounds of gear in tow, Siller ran from the tunnel to the Twin Towers where he lost his life. He was 34 years old and left behind his wife and five children.

During the last Sunday of each September a Tunnel to Towers run is held in New York City that follows the same path as that taken by Siller on Sept. 11. Proceeds from the run benefit the families of injured or fallen veterans and first responders.

Shortly after Singh was killed on Dec. 26, 2018, Tunnel to Towers Foundation Chairman and CEO and brother of Firefighter Siller, Frank Siller, flew from New York City to California to personally meet with Corporal Singh’s widow at the Newman Police Department where he informed her that the remaining mortgage balance on the Singh’s family home was to be paid in full by the Tunnel to Towers Foundation.

Proceeds from the event benefit the Foundation. For the past several years, the Foundation's program service percentage on average was 95% - 95 cents out of every dollar has gone directly to the programs and services. To date, the Foundation has committed $250 million to the families of the fallen and injured.

The three main program of the Foundation are:

Smart Home Program: Building adaptive homes for the military's most catastrophically injured service members. Gold Star Family Home Program: Providing mortgage free homes to Gold Star Families with small children. Fallen First Responder Program: Providing mortgage payoffs for first responders killed in the line of duty who leave behind a wife and small children.