Team Rubicon serves communities by mobilizing veterans to continue their service, leveraging their skills and experience to help people prepare, respond, and recover from disasters and humanitarian crises.
Team Rubicon was formed in January 2010 following the Haiti earthquake, when William McNulty and Jacob "Jake" Wood[1][2] led a medical team into Port-au-Prince three days after the earthquake. The first Team Rubicon was an initial team of eight. They gathered funds and medical supplies from friends and family and flew into the Dominican Republic. They rented a truck, loaded their gear, and headed west to Haiti. The team treated thousands of patients, traveling to camps deemed "too dangerous" by other aid organizations. They ventured outside the traditional scale of disaster response, focusing on those who would be overlooked and left untreated.[3][4]
That experience was the beginning of Team Rubicon.[5] Team Rubicon wanted to solve two problems: (1) Inadequate disaster response which is often slow to respond, has an antiquated infrastructure and is not using the best technological solutions or well-trained members, and (2) inadequate veteran reintegration into civilian life. Military veterans' training, skills, and experience make them well suited to disaster response while helping others can promote healing and community to alleviate some of the reintegration issues that drive a high suicide rate among veterans.[1]
The death of fellow Rubicon member Clay Hunt from suicide redoubled Team Rubicon's organizational mission towards veteran reintegration. The team's role in domestic disasters is both to provide humanitarian assistance and to provide veterans an opportunity to continue to serve.[1][6]
The name "Rubicon" is from the phrase "crossing the Rubicon," an idiom to mean passing a point of no return.[7] The red and dark brown logo is made up of a sideways cross, a traditional symbol of first aid but here on its side as a departure from the traditional, with a river running through the logo, as a symbol of the gap between disasters and disaster relief.
J.J. Watt, defensive end for the Houston Texans, raised an unexpected $37 million towards the Hurricane Harvey relief efforts,[10] and so consulted SBP, a disaster relief organization based in New Orleans, and Team Rubicon for how to best spend the funds.[11]
Many of Team Rubicon's hundreds of responses are to more localized disasters such as catastrophic snowstorms,[22] smaller tornadoes,[23] and flooding.[24][25]
With the onset of the COVID-19 epidemic, Team Rubicon USA expanded its operational focus to include feeding programs in conjunction with Food Lifeline and Feeding America and Meals on Wheels and to take individual initiative, called "Neighbors Helping Neighbors", to safely assist their fellow community members.[26]
Team Rubicon also conducts wildfire mitigation operations that both serve as training opportunities and help protect vulnerable communities by removing potential fuels.[27][28][29]
In 2018 Team Rubicon became the first non-governmental organization in North America to receive WHO Emergency Medical Team Type 1 Mobile certification.[30]
In 2021 and thereafter, Team Rubicon supported Afghan refugees who came to the U.S. following the 2021 Kabul airlift.[31]
Leadership
In 2013, General (Ret.) David Petraeus joined Team Rubicon's Board of Advisors.[32][33] Petraeus promoted the work of veteran reintegration, citing its importance to soldiers returning from war.[34]
Three years later, in 2016, civil rights expert Ehsan Zaffar joined the Board of Advisors.[35]
Additional high-profile supporters are former Presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton.[38][39] The George W. Bush Center included Team Rubicon as one of the case studies in its research on veteran serving nonprofits (VSNP).[40][41]
Some international chapters of Team Rubicon were detached and re-organized into independent organizations with the same mission. For example, Team Rubicon's Norway chapter became "Response Norway".[42]
Partnerships
Team Rubicon is or has partnered with many US corporations to support its mission including (list is not complete):
The Clay Hunt Fellows Program is a leadership development fellowship created by Team Rubicon.[55] It is named after Clay Hunt, one of the original members of Team Rubicon who suffered from PTSD and depression and died by suicide in 2011.[56][57] It was founded in 2013 as a 12 month program, but has since been changed to a 6 month program.[58][59] On February 12, 2015, a veteran suicide prevention bill, the Clay Hunt Suicide Prevention for American Veterans Act or the Clay Hunt SAV "Suicide Prevention for American Veterans" Act, named in his honor, became law.[60][61]
Wood, Jake (2014). Take Command Lessons in Leadership: How to Be a First Responder in Business. New York: Crown Business. ISBN978-0-804-13839-0. OCLC985805914.
Klein, Joe (2015). Charlie Mike: A True Story of War and Finding the Way Home. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN978-1-451-67730-0. OCLC908108575.