Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ways to show you care

Service projects abound in United Way annual event

- By John Przybys Las Vegas Review-journal

O NOct. 5, Southern Nevadans wielding paintbrush­es, gardening implements, hand tools, art supplies, books and massive goodwill will fan out across the valley to improve, in ways tangible and intangible, the lives of others.

On the tangible side: the murals painted, landscapes refurbishe­d and books read to students by participan­ts of United Way of Southern Nevada’s third annual Day of Caring.

On the intangible side: the feeling of satisfacti­on enjoyed and the sense of community built amid all that energetic volunteeri­ng.

About 1,600 volunteers participat­ed in last year’s Day of Caring, and Laurie Mann, senior director of marketing for the United

CARING

Way, is expecting a turnout of about 2,000 this year.

Volunteers will spend either a half day or a full day on that Friday working on more than 250 projects at about 85 area schools and nonprofits, all of which would “have no way to get this work done if not for the Day of Caring,” Mann said.

The day will begin at 8:30 a.m. with a rally at Town Square. Among the volunteers will be co-workers from area businesses, members of clubs, churches and service organizati­ons, and families and individual­s.

With the array of organizati­ons and causes, volunteers will find it easy to choose projects that appeal to their own passions. “What’s so amazing is, when you go on the (registrati­on) site, if you’re passionate about animals, schools or children, or maybe it’s U.S. veterans, there are so many opportunit­ies.”

Megan Farnsworth, Wells Fargo Bank project manager and the company’s Southern Nevada volunteer chapter president, will volunteer at Cyril S. Wengert Elementary School.

“What I especially love about that is, I used to go there,” said Farnsworth, adding that volunteers’ arrival is as much fun for kids as it is for the volunteers.

“The school engages kids, where they have student ambassador­s come and greet us,” she said.

Last year, “some of the student ambassador­s had the opportunit­y to work side by side with us as we painted, so it was great.”

Interactio­n between volunteers and students also is planned at Walter Bracken STEAM Academy, said assistant principal Michelle Wheatfill. For example, children will inscribe their painted handprints on a volunteer-painted mural that will join several other Day of Caring murals on campus.

Other Day of Caring projects at Bracken include installing barriers on a chain link fence “to add some privacy to our back playground,” Wheatfill said, and refurbishi­ng the school’s turtle and tortoise habitats.

Bracken has been a part of Day of Caring since the program’s creation here, Wheatfill said. “Without the support of our volunteers, we wouldn’t be able to get these projects done.”

Volunteers also will be rebuilding burrows at the Tortoise Group’s emergency habitat, said Kobbe Shaw, the organizati­on’s executive director. Shaw said Day of Caring volunteers are vital because the facility is staffed “100 percent by volunteers.”

Shaw said this year’s Day of Caring may, for some volunteers, serve as a means of observing the one-year anniversar­y of the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting, which left 58 killed and hundreds more injured.

“One of the positive things that happened out of the shootings was a genuine sense of community,” Shaw said. “At my organizati­on, as well as others, volunteer numbers jumped in the month of October last year. People wanted to help in any way possible.”

In the wake of last year’s tragedy, Farnsworth said, “we all came together as a family, this whole city. It was something none of us could forget. This is an opportunit­y to bring back that feeling of unity and desire to help (by) working together.”

Contact John Przybys at jprzybys @reviewjour­nal.com or 702-3830280. Follow @Jjprzybys on Twitter.

 ??  ?? Third-graders Mila Lederer, left, and Chloe Anakwa walk by a buddy bench on the Walter Bracken STEAM Academy playground. This year’s Day of Caring projects will include creating a rainbow of students’ and volunteers’ handprints on the wall.
Third-graders Mila Lederer, left, and Chloe Anakwa walk by a buddy bench on the Walter Bracken STEAM Academy playground. This year’s Day of Caring projects will include creating a rainbow of students’ and volunteers’ handprints on the wall.

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