.....Advertisement.....
.....Advertisement.....
Shanna 
Flowers

Youthful spirit

In Wednesday's assembly line of young volunteers at the Southwestern Virginia Second Harvest Food Bank, Melissa Downey abruptly halted the activity and called a quick confab with Glenvar High schoolmate Kimmie Martin.

Should Downey toss the 12-roll pack of Scott tissue, which was really an 11-pack, because it had been ripped open? Or was it safe to put in the donation bin to go out to a needy family? Without hesitating, Kimmie made the call.

Because the rolls were exposed, 17-year-old Kimmie figured, they might not be sanitary. Melissa, 14, agreed.

The tissue was tossed.

Across town at Greenvale School, Glenvar junior Taylor Montgomery welcomed his role as the oldest kid in a circle of preschoolers dancing and moving to the "bean bag" song.

By late morning, another crop of Glenvar students had raked enough leaves at the Bradley Free Clinic to fill 43 bags. Afterward, they lounged in a large multipurpose room at the facility.

Don't call today's youth self-absorbed.

More than 200 Glenvar students -- nearly one-third of the Roanoke County school's student body -- converged on five Roanoke United Way agencies Wednesday morning in a show of youthful energy, excitement and compassion for the community's less fortunate.

Sure, for some, the motives weren't altogether altruistic. Taylor, who wants to be a teacher, admitted that such activities look good on a college application. But equally enjoyable, he said, is the fellowship the activity allows.

The Glenvar group was the largest group to participate in this year's Days of Caring, which provide United Way benefactors an opportunity to visit agencies and see donor contributions at work.

Glenvar joined a list of groups this year who participated, including Erie Insurance, Shenandoah Life, Allstate Insurance and Freedom First Credit Union.

Americans are a volunteering people, according to an analysis by the U.S. Census Bureau. Nearly 61 million Americans volunteered last year, giving 8.1 billion hours of service worth about $158 billion.

Youth represent a significant share of that effort. Another older study, conducted by the Corporation for National and Community Service, found that 55 percent of young people volunteer -- compared with 29 percent of adults.

That study found that young people who volunteer are less likely to engage in risky behavior. They're too busy to get in trouble. They also tend to be better students.

Taylor shrugged off skipping advanced English, chemistry and Algebra II courses Wednesday as he jumped around with children at Greenvale, first throwing a red beanbag in the air and then placing it on one knee and then an elbow.

"I'm a little immature myself, so it helps out," he said, laughing about his natural ease with the boys and girls in Chris Fisher's preschool class.

For four years, Glenvar has visited agencies and provided some much-needed help completing projects that the nonprofits may not have had the resources to complete.

This year, school buses deposited students at Greenvale, the food bank, Salvation Army, Friendship Manor, Family Service and Bradley Free Clinic.

At the clinic, Executive Director Estelle Avner joked with me earlier this week that the youth would do everything "except open-heart surgery."

Property manager Mike Reynolds had their tasks lined up. Some filed while others raked and still others washed windows. That was fine with 17-year-old junior Zach Hill.

"I like manual labor better" than working with the preschoolers, Zach said, explaining why he signed up for a return visit to Bradley.

At the food bank, half of the students packaged C batteries in groups of four in a plastic baggies. The other half went through boxes of toiletries, staples and candy and placed a pink sticker on the items, designating them as "Donated" -- not to be resold.

The recent presidential election showed that youth are engaged in and care about their nation and its communities. The Glenvar students demonstrated that spirit.

"It mostly depends on the individual," said 15-year-old Colin Bittner, a take-charge kind of kid who hoisted boxes of food as he created space for his schoolmates to continue sorting.

"If given the chance, they will do something."

4 Comments »

  1. Are you kidding me? They tossed 11 rolls of toilet paper because one was missing and it may be unsanitary? If you were a needy family, would you rather have the 11 rolls remaining, or none? This is the kind of ridiculous waste that drives me nuts. I don't know about anyone else, but I would have used them in my own home. I didn't realize it became "unsanitary" when I opened the outer wrapper. Ridiculous.

    The youngsters previewed a video of the rules for sorting donations. Packaging -- particularly of toiletries, cleaning products and other such items -- require careful consideration. To assuage your outrage, the food bank's quality control volunteers who go behind the youth and other infrequent volunteers might have deemed some items, including the tissue, salvageable. Don't let the trees blind the view of the forest: Young people doing something positive.--s

    Comment by Hard Working Mom — November 13, 2008 @ 8:10 am

  2. I applaud the volunteerism- that's fabulous. But please, a little common sense. How many times have you been in a public restroom and wished to goodness you had a few little squares left on the roll? My dad, who lived through the depression, and all of my grandparents, would be horrified. We are the only country in the world that views things like this as not good enough. Do you think a family in Mexico would turn that down? How about India. We should be ashamed of ourselves for the things we throw away as unacceptable. Again, I applaud the effort, but really...

    I reiterate the role of quality control volunteers.--s

    Comment by Hard Working Mom — November 13, 2008 @ 9:54 am

  3. You people missed the point here. These teenagers are to be commended for volunteering. How anyone can read this article, and come out of it with an attitude about a package of toilet paper being tossed is just wrong.
    These Glenvar students really stepped up and did a fantastic job!

    Comment by Donna Gibson — November 15, 2008 @ 6:48 pm

  4. I think we're all in agreement that anytime our youth get involved in community service it's a giant step forward. We'll be looking to them to provide our leadership when we're all over at the nursing home playing checkers.

    Comment by Mike — November 16, 2008 @ 4:41 am

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment

Search

About this blog

Shanna Flowers

In her signature plainspoken style, Michigan native Shanna Flowers peels away the layers and gets to the heart of the issues. No pretense. Just straightforward perspective. Shanna writes about local people whose circumstances reflect decisions made as near as City Hall or as far away as the halls of Congress. Other times, she weighs in on a topic because it is incredibly ridiculous. Or heartening. Or fascinating. Read Shanna's column three days a week, Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, at roanoke.com

RSS feed

Comments

    • ms. Goldenwillow: Shanna, Thank you for this up-close glimpse, especially the feelings of Brenda Keeling — then...
    • mike: Static, my good friend: Finding a numb-nuts of Hutton’s ilk would be like looking for a pearl in a cow...
    • Static Lines: Robert Hutton None of the regular posters have used the b- word, I guess it was a regular staple at...
    • Robert Hutton: Yes I did. As well as some background info, seems she drinks from the same preverbial...
    • Ed S.: You know, several regulars go together here for “coffee” over Shanna’s thrice-weekly column....