
Kidney For Eric
Welcome — and Thank You for Being Here
This site is for Eric Moy — a beloved husband, father, friend, and pillar of both the Rye and Greenwich communities — who urgently needs a kidney transplant.
Eric has spent his life giving to others. He’s coached teams, served his town, supported his children through every milestone, and been the quiet rock of his family. Now, his kidneys are failing due to complications from diabetes and a long medical battle following sepsis. Dialysis will begin soon — but a living kidney transplant is the only real solution.
We’re asking for help: not just for Eric, but for his family, and for all the meaningful moments they still hope to share together — holidays, graduations, move-in day, and family dinners.
If you can help by sharing Eric’s story, getting tested, or simply spreading awareness about living kidney donation, his family is deeply grateful. Your support brings hope — and brings Eric one step closer to healing.
Welcome
Eric's Story
Eric Moy is a devoted husband, father, son, friend, and beloved member of both the Rye and Greenwich communities.
Born and raised in Rye, NY, Eric has remained a constant presence there — serving the town, coaching local teams, and helping run his family’s business, Fong’s Cleaners, which has been part of the Rye community since the 1950s. Since 2001, he and I have lived in Greenwich, CT, where we’ve raised our children and built a life rooted in family, service, and community. We’ve been married for 24 years.
After the September 11th attacks, Eric joined the Rye Auxiliary Police, where he has served faithfully for more than two decades. It was never for recognition — he simply felt called to help.
Eric is an athlete at heart. He taught himself tennis and became a ranked USTA player, while also excelling in lacrosse and wrestling at Rye High School. As a lacrosse goalie, he played at SUNY Albany and continued competing in local leagues throughout the tri-state area. He later joined Team Israel’s Masters team, earning MVP honors in an international tournament in 2019. From 2016 to 2020, he also played with Touch of Grey. Even in sports, Eric found ways to give back — organizing the Rye High School alumni lacrosse fundraiser game to support scholarships and cancer research.
His service didn’t stop there. He sat on the Rye Flood Committee (2017–2023), was a board member of the Rye Presbyterian Nursery School, and served as a Deacon at Rye Presbyterian Church. His family’s business, Fong’s Cleaners — a true three-generation small business — proudly provided services to the local police, fire, and EMT departments for decades, with Eric and his parents working side by side, six days a week.
Professionally, Eric interned with the NY Rangers’ public relations department during college, coached the girls lacrosse team at Rye High School (leading them to the state championship), worked in banking at Bank of New York, and later returned to help run Fong’s Cleaners with his family.
Eric and I have two children: Max (18) and Molly (13).
Max will be starting college at Syracuse University this fall — a milestone he worked incredibly hard for, earning scholarships through his dedication and grit. Molly, a rising high schooler, is doing everything she can to stay on the honor roll and make her dad proud.
Eric has always been deeply involved in their lives — cheering at games, applauding at school plays, encouraging their passions, and cooking his signature prime rib or deep-frying the Thanksgiving turkey. He is truly the heartbeat of our family.
Eric's Health Journey
Eric was diagnosed with diabetes in his early 20s and managed it for years. But in 2021, after Hurricane Ida brought three feet of floodwater into the family store, he contracted sepsis during the cleanup.
Over the years that followed, he endured multiple surgeries, particularly on his foot, and battled ongoing infections and trauma. The strain led to chronic kidney disease, and now his kidney function has dropped to just 10%.
In March 2025, he was hospitalized for surgery. By April, emergency room doctors told him dialysis might be imminent. He is now being evaluated as a top-priority transplant candidate.
Dialysis will only buy time. A living kidney donor is his only real path forward.
Despite everything, Eric continues to show up — for his family, for his future. He holds on to his dignity, his strength, and his optimism even through pain and fatigue. It’s not easy to ask for help — especially something of this magnitude — but I’m doing so on his behalf. Because Eric still has so much more life to live.
Many of Eric’s hospitalizations have overlapped with holidays or birthdays — moments that should have been filled with celebration, not crisis. But those moments have also deepened our resolve. We want those struggles to mean something. We want to turn hardship into hope.
Eric is fighting for time — to see Max off to Syracuse, to help Molly thrive in high school, to keep cooking, cheering, loving, and giving. And we are fighting right beside him.
If you can help — by learning more, getting tested, or simply sharing his story — we are profoundly grateful.
Your support brings hope. Your action brings possibility. And your kindness brings life.
How to Help Eric
Learn about becoming a living donor
Even one call can make a world of difference.
Did you know…
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You can live a full, healthy life with just one kidney?
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All testing and surgery costs are covered by the recipient’s insurance?
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The transplant team supports and guides you through every step — from the first question to full recovery?
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You can start learning more with zero pressure or commitment?
If you’re curious or want to speak with someone, please contact:
Yale New Haven Transplantation Center
Center for Living Organ Donors
📞 866-925-3897
Please mention Eric Moy when calling or inquiring
We understand that the idea of kidney donation can feel overwhelming — and that’s okay. Just taking the first step is powerful. Every kind thought, every conversation, and every call helps us move closer to hope.
You Can Also…
• Share Eric’s story on social media, by email, or with your community
• Tell a friend or family member
• Include Eric in your prayers or intentions — your support matters
• Reach out if you have connections to media, influencers, or organizations that can amplify the message
• Just start a conversation — awareness saves lives
Every small act helps bring us closer to a miracle.