TSA ID checkpoint

Little Acts of Kindness

TSA officer spent her stimulus check to support and thank front-line workers.

TSA Supervisor Samantha Mudge has been making masks to hand out to law enforcement, healthcare workers, pharmacy workers and others in her community.

Mudge remembers what it was like last year, working during the federal government shutdown for several weeks without a paycheck.

“So many people helped us during the government furlough,” Mudge said. “So I felt that I needed to do something to support others” during the pandemic.

A 13-year veteran of the TSA, Mudge works the early 3:15 a.m. shift at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI), Mudge decided to crochet masks for the Calvert County Sheriff’s Department. She crocheted 25 masks in black with a blue line across them—symbolic of the phrase “thin blue line,” which is emblematic of law enforcement—and dropped them off at the Sheriff’s office along with a box of submarine sandwiches from a local shop and a couple pounds of shrimp from a local grocery store.

Still, Mudge felt an internal desire to do more. When her stimulus check arrived in the mail, she made a conscious decision to use that money in ways to back people who have to work during the pandemic. “When I received my check, I looked at it and knew I could do more” to support others during the pandemic, she said. She bought fabric to sew masks, yarn to crochet masks and food to donate.

She sewed 50 masks and donated them to the CalvertHealth Medical Center in Calvert County, Maryland; delivered 30 masks to her local Walmart pharmacy because her pharmacist and pharmacy workers had no masks; and she handed a bag of her masks to healthcare workers who were standing outside waiting for food at a BBQ restaurant.

“I guess you could say they were all random acts of kindness,” Mudge said. She knows that during the pandemic, that her unexpected generosity is appreciated, much like she and her TSA colleagues were grateful for the support of the public during the government shutdown. “It’s just spreading some kindness” during these unusual times, she said.

About the Author

Ralph C. Jensen is the Publisher/Editor in chief of Security Today magazine.

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