[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 133 (Wednesday, September 17, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5654-S5655]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING MATT HALEY
Mr. COONS. Madam President, I come to the floor today my heart heavy
with a challenging task, which is to convey the remarkable, the
special, the powerful spirit of a friend who passed 3 weeks ago in a
tragic accident in India.
Matt Haley was a remarkable Delawarean. Matt Haley was a gifted and
accomplished chef and entrepreneur. Matt Haley was someone who touched
so many lives in my home State of Delaware.
In 2012 Matt won the Delaware Restaurant Association's Cornerstone
Award, a lifetime achievement award recognizing restaurateurs who
dedicate their lives to humanitarian efforts.
Matt owned eight different restaurants all across the beach region so
well known to folks here in Washington. Matt owned restaurants in
Rehoboth Beach, Lewes, Ocean View, Bethany Beach, Fenwick Island, and
was involved in dozens of other business enterprises in other States.
In 2014 Matt had the best year he ever had in terms of the reach and
scope of his potential and his vision and his recognition by his
profession. He won the National Restaurant Association Cornerstone
Humanitarian Award. I was thrilled to be able to join in that
celebration here in Washington. He won the International Association of
Culinary Professionals Humanitarian Award. He won the James Beard
Humanitarian Award in a remarkable celebration in New York. He won all
three major recognitions, major awards from the restaurant and culinary
industry--the triple crown, as it were.
Having never met him, you might think this man, having been so
successful as an entrepreneur and a businessman and so recognized and
celebrated in all these different ways, would have been puffed up and
filled with himself and with pride and with a sense of accomplishment
and success. Matt did have a sense of accomplishment and success, but
it came from a very different place. His spirit, his personality was
profoundly different than that brief resume might suggest because Matt
was someone who had a second and a third chance at life, so he embraced
it with a passion and an openheartedness I have never seen anywhere
else.
Matt was 53 years old and had been sober for 24 years. Not many years
before this remarkable year of success he had this year, Matt had been
riding the bus to work as a minimum-wage dishwasher as he was
reinventing himself. Matt spent 4 years in prison on a 13-year prison
sentence.
As he memorably remarked in a talk he gave days before he left on
this trip to India, Matt had life-altering, terrible experiences as a
child. Matt had managed to grow up in an environment of circumstances
and have experiences that would cripple any human person, any spirit,
and had become someone who was violent and addicted, and inevitably,
as a consequence of a lot of his actions, he ended up in jail. He was
exactly the sort of person so many would be willing to write off. Yet
Matt found an opportunity through the culinary arts, through the simple
and powerful skill of cooking for others. He found a pathway back and a
roadway up. Matt was someone who cooked not just well but was gifted at
pulling together completely unrelated items and making something
simple, tasty, and powerful.
Matt understood what a remarkable pathway toward success and
independence restaurants can be for those who start working at the very
lowest end of the scale in our country in terms of pay scale and yet
can steadily grow to be successful managers or even restaurant owners.
Matt was someone who also had just gotten a positive diagnosis after
struggling with a nearly life-ending bout with cancer. Matt had nearly
died to this world once as a young man in prison and then had nearly
died to us a second time through cancer.
I was blessed to have gotten to know him just in the last few years
and to have been touched by the power of his energy. Matt had a hunger
to connect with and touch and help love others in the world who hadn't
yet seen the possibilities of this world.
Matt would go anywhere, anytime to help someone in need in Delaware.
The stories are legend of what Matt did spontaneously and powerfully
to reach out and touch folks in our home State and around the world who
needed his special gift--not just his resources but his energy and his
kindness.
Matt's business partner Scott shared with me a story that he was
literally driving down the road and came across a van from the Delaware
Adolescent Program, Inc., DAPI, a van for a program that helps young
moms complete school and be healthy and successful
[[Page S5655]]
mothers. Their van was broken down by the side of the road, and, after
learning more about the program and its impact and its importance and
seeing their dilapidated and outdated van, he literally bought them a
new one on the spot.
Matt was someone who, having never traveled before until recent years
when he first became successful, found himself challenged and then
enlivened and then aflamed with a passion for traveling around the
world and for hearing from and connecting with young people and their
needs. He tells much more powerfully than I can the story of his
becoming connected to young women, to girls, in Nepal, victims of
trafficking, victims of sexual abuse, who were hungry and lonely and to
whom he was able to help provide food and shelter and hope.
He later also connected with a whole community in Central America,
and he traveled regularly to India and Nepal and to Central America as
well as up and down my State. He volunteered in our prisons. He worked
with our food bank. He spent time and gave resources in India and Nepal
and in Central America. Literally the last time I spoke to Matt, I had
just had an opportunity to meet a young woman who was truly struggling
to find opportunity in our home State. She was a recovering drug addict
and came up to me at an event in Dover and frankly said she never
believed someone in my position would care and would work and take any
risk to help someone like her find employment. She was interested in
possibly working in a restaurant.
As we talked at greater length, I told her Matt's story. I told her
how this young man, full of anger and abuse and difficulty in his young
life, had ended up an addict and in prison and yet, through his own
determination and through the kindness and partnership of others, had
managed to go on to be an incredible success, an employer to hundreds,
even thousands, and a contributor and a leader to groups such as La
Esperanza and the food bank, and to support public school teachers and
to support folks coming out of prison. I asked if she would be
interested in hearing from him.
In my last conversation with Matt--a man who was incredibly busy, as
he was finishing up several business projects and about to get on a
plane to meet a long commitment with a group of girls in need--he said:
Absolutely. I would love to talk to her. Get her on the phone with me.
He made time the next day to meet her, encourage her, and invite her
to come to the food bank presentation he was making.
To his very last breath, Matt was passionate about touching and
changing the lives of others. His very last initiative was to fund
teachers and schools in southern Delaware and help provide supplies for
them in their classrooms, and his very last day was spent riding a
motorcycle on one of the highest and most dangerous roads in the world
in the Himalaya to personally deliver supplies and engagement and
support to girls in a remote village in a difficult and distant part of
the world.
Matt Haley's compassion, his spirit, and his energy touched deeply me
and so many others. His determination to do everything he could with
every day he had and to make every difference he could in the world
should inspire and challenge all of us. He has left a significant
amount of his accumulated resources to his Global Delaware Fund, which
will continue his great work in these many places.
It is my hope and my prayer that all of us who have had our lives
touched by Matt and by his unique and infectious humor and spirit will
continue his remarkable lifetime of work and that all of us will
remember that in this Nation, every person has value and every person
has potential no matter where they are from or where they are today.
Their path forward can be lifted if we just continue to carry forward
the remarkable passion and spirit of Matt Haley.
I thank the Chair.
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