Week 24: Community Connections Camp

June 11, 2018

This week was the week of my Community Connections Camp  at Lakehill for middle and high school students. It is without a doubt one of the highlights of my year! Each day of the camp, we partner with two different non-profit organizations (one in the morning, one in the afternoon). I love returning to volunteer with long-time favorites, as well as introducing campers to new places to channel their altruistic energy. I was honored to have my colleagues Kaye Hauschild and Jo Cayme-Mosley with me again for this camp. Many of our dedicated campers return every year to volunteer with us.

We began our week at Crossroads Community Services, where our campers did an amazing job sorting linens, stocking food, organizing donations, and shopping with clients. Crossroads provides much needed services to those living below the poverty line in Dallas. They are always needing donations of men’s and boys’ shoes and clothing – please think of them when clearing out closets!

In the afternoon, we visited Voice of Hope, where we worked with their first and second grade students. We led an arts and crafts activity in their classrooms and some competitive games of balloon tennis in their gym. Voice of Hope is dedicated to serving families in West Dallas, focusing their efforts on the children of the community.  Our campers did an amazing job engaging the young students, keeping them on task, and making sure everyone had fun.

On Tuesday, we began our day with CitySquare’s Food on the Move program. We helped set up, passed out food, organized activities for the children, and stayed and played at four different locations in the community. Our campers did a great job interacting with the children we served. CitySquare is a broad community development organization that offers a wide range of social services that address four key areas related to the persistence of poverty: hunger, health, housing, and hope. Their Food on the Move program helps provide free food and fun to impoverished children across Dallas in the summer when school is out.

From there, we went directly to our afternoon project at Jewish Family Service (JFS), a nonsectarian mental health and social services agency that impacts over 13,000 lives a year. We were able to participate in an amazing simulation they call the Food Pantry Experience. Our group was divided into teams and each given a family profile and scenario. They were charged with creating a budget for their family, dealing with unexpected setbacks along the way, and preparing a list of food they could purchase. They then went through the intake process at JFS, filling out the needed forms, before being allowed to shop in the food pantry. It really was an amazing experience, and gave us some insight into the food pantry clients we served the next day.

On Wednesday, we traveled to Brother Bill’s Helping Hand in West Dallas. Brother Bill’s brings not just a legacy of 75 years of service to West Dallas, but hope for a better life to the more than 25,000 people living in the 75212 zip code. This is always a favorite project for my students, as they love getting to help in the grocery store. We bagged produce, sorted plastic bags, and prepared for the approximately 100 guests who visited the grocery store. When the doors opened, our campers were ready to greet the guests, help them with their selections, provide food (and sometimes recipes), sack groceries, and help guests to their cars. This is the first post I have written on Brother Bill’s, and I highly recommend volunteering here. It’s fun, engaging, and always busy! The students were amazing – chatting with the guests, carrying bags of groceries, and making every person feel special.

In the afternoon, we cleaned Lakehill’s adopted shoreline at White Rock Lake (through For The Love of the Lake). The campers did a great job despite the heat, finding a lot of trash in a short amount of time.

We spent Thursday morning at Community Partners of Dallas, an organization that assists CPS caseworkers in helping abandoned, abused, or neglected children who have been removed from their homes. After a tour of the facility, we got to work on a seemingly monumental task – sorting, packing, and shelving row after row of backpacks. Our campers were absolutely amazing – they didn’t take a minute’s break, “power sorting” backpacks into a variety of categories and getting them into boxes and onto the shelves in beautiful order.

After lunch, we traveled to the North Texas Food Bank where we packed cereal boxes for distribution, broke down cardboard boxes, and stacked a lot of pallets.

On Friday, we headed to the VNA Meals on Wheels headquarters for a quick orientation and to pick up our food. We then traveled to Potter’s House/Primrose Oaks in South Dallas to deliver. The campers did a great job greeting clients and delivering meals with a big side of smiles. I loved seeing how they interacted with the residents.

After lunch, we prepared Bingo bags for Austin Street Center to be delivered later in the summer.

Together, our group gave 762 combined hours of service to ten wonderful organizations dedicated to the environment and to those affected by abuse, poverty, homelessness, and hunger. I am so proud of our campers and their engagement with our community this week.

I can hardly wait for my next Community Connections camp later in the summer!

 

Week 9: Ferguson Road Initiative

March 3, 2018

During my ninth week of service, I volunteered with the Ferguson Road Initiative (FRI) on their annual Operation Beautification initiative.

More than 200 volunteers, including 12 neighborhood organizations, six schools, two apartment complexes, 10 businesses, four service organizations, and three faith-based communities, pitched in to help clean up along Ferguson Road. Volunteers met in the parking lot at Ferguson Road and Lakeland, to be outfitted with trash grabbers, trash bags, and bright orange vests to increase visibility. Several neighborhood sponsors provided food and drinks to the volunteers before they set out.

Our group of 20 Lakehill students and parents cleaned along Ferguson Road, between Highland Drive and Lakehill’s Roger L. Perry Campus. In total, several hundred bags of trash and illegal signs were collected for city trash pickup.

The mission of the Ferguson Road Initiative is to transform Far East Dallas into a safe, beautiful, prosperous, and proud community by inspiring hope and working together to achieve a shared vision.

Since 1998, FRI has developed valuable partnerships with other agencies and organizations to facilitate economic development and community revitalization.

If you are interested in volunteering with the Ferguson Road Initiative, fill out the volunteer form and they will contact you as opportunities become available. You can also seek out similar community organizations in your own neighborhood.

Week 2: For the Love of the Lake

During my second week of service, I worked with an organization that I have been happily involved with for many years. I began volunteering with For the Love of the Lake (FTLOTL) in 2008 with Lakehill students and families, and we became an Adopt-a-Shoreline group shortly after. Any business, non-profit group, school, church, or local organization can become part of the Adopt-A-Shoreline program by becoming responsible for a small portion of the shoreline or park and keeping it litter-free.

In 2010, Lakehill was honored as the New Volunteer Group of the Year, and, in 2016, the Volunteer Group of the Year. We celebrated this honor on the anniversary of our 100th lake clean up.

Every second Saturday of the month is the Shoreline Spruce Up at White Rock Lake Park, a FTLOTL tradition that has been going strong since 1996. Volunteers collect litter throughout the park and along the shoreline. As a result of this dedicated effort, volunteers have transformed White Rock Lake Park into the neighborhood treasure it is today.

Over the years, our Lakehill volunteers have picked up trash in pouring rain, freezing snow and sleet, and unbearable Texas heat. We have also enjoyed many beautiful days in one of my favorite locations in Dallas. Our group has developed an incredible sense of pride in our adopted area. It’s not uncommon for a student to head to our section of shoreline to pick up trash on days when we don’t even have an event scheduled.

We have found many “treasures” during our 100+ clean ups: a 15-foot storm drain in the water (that one took several hours and a physics lesson on levers and pulleys from a science teacher in a kayak); a full-size sofa; an urn full of preserved lemons (we’re still talking about that one); dozens of shoes (but only one matching pair); and more tennis balls and Styrofoam cups than I care to mention.

I love this service project because you can visibly see the results of your hard work. Cleaning at White Rock Lake is a perfect activity for children of all ages and a great way for families to spend time together outdoors. I can’t think of a better way to start a Saturday morning than on the shores of this neighborhood gem.

If you would like to volunteer and are not part of an Adopt-A-Shoreline group, check-in between 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. at the FTLOTL office, enjoy a continental breakfast provided by local sponsors, and collect your supplies (trash bags, gloves, and grabbers). First-time volunteers should stop at the training table for a quick orientation.

For the Love of the Lake (FTLOTL) is a non-profit organization whose volunteers support programs to preserve and enhance White Rock Lake Park. The group organizes regular clean-up activities, tree planting events, and raises money needed to fund improvements to White Rock Lake Park. White Rock Lake Park, at nearly 2,000 acres, is a hub of recreational activities and one of the most heavily used parks in the Dallas Park system.

Other volunteer initiatives of For the Love of the Lake include the Texas Stream Team, the Playground at Flag Pole Hill, and the Celebration Tree Grove.

Lakehill volunteers at the Second Saturday Spruce Up at White Rock Lake.