Restaurant chain rewards waitress for her honesty

? A cash-strapped waitress at a suburban Applebee’s restaurant has been rewarded many times over for turning in $3,300 that a customer left behind.

Heidi Tomassi, 22, had plenty of uses for the money. She and her husband were heavily in debt after taking off work and traveling to see a specialist who could treat their infant son’s heart condition.

But the waitress’ honesty paid off. Applebee’s International Inc. announced Friday it was putting $25,000 into an employee assistance fund named after Tomassi and presented her a check for $4,260. The money came from restaurant vendors and employees from her restaurant in Olathe, Kan., and the corporate headquarters in Overland Park, Kan.

Applebee’s also promised to make up the difference between whatever donations Tomassi receives and the $25,000 a man promised to give her from casino winnings. That promised money never arrived.

Besides the money she received Friday, well-wishers had already given Tomassi nearly $10,000, along with toys for her son and 2-year-old daughter.

The response to her story came as no surprise to Lloyd Hill, chairman and chief executive officer of Applebee’s.

“I think we are thirsty and hungry for a story like this,” said Hill, who presented the check to Tomassi. “It’s a story of hope and integrity. I think it gives all of us more faith and hope for mankind.”

Tomassi remembers coming home from her fifth day of work at Applebee’s and telling her husband, Joe, she had found an envelope filled with 33 $100 bills. She had given the envelope to her manager.

“I said, ‘God, why did you put this in my hands?”‘ Tomassi said. “I think every day since he’s showed me: ‘I wanted to test you, and you passed the test, and I wanted to take care of you guys.”‘

A Sedalia man claimed the $3,300 the next day and rewarded Tomassi with $100. He had sold a car to have money for Christmas presents.

That event marked a change of luck for the family.

Tomassi’s son, Griffin, was full term when he was born in July but the veins in his heart were too small and weren’t connected properly.

Joe Tomassi then lost his job after asking for time off to spend with his family.

The couple found a surgeon at Stanford University in California who patched skin into the boy’s tiny veins to make them bigger and increase blood flow. Though it will be several months before the family learns whether the veins are growing along with their son, doctors’ reports have been promising.

But the good news came with a cost. The couple had their water and phone service cut off and ran behind on rent payments as debts mounted.

They now plan to use the donations to buy Christmas gifts and pay off their bills and loans from family. Joe Tomassi also has obtained a job making more money and with better benefits than the one he lost.