Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

300 turn out to clean Wetlands Park

MLK day of service in sync with the holiday

- By KIMBER LAUX

The sun peeked from behind high, gray clouds Saturday morning, its rays reflected and scattered by broken glass littering the desert landscape at Clark County Wetlands Park.

Nearly 300 volunteers, including state Sen. Mark Manendo and county Commission­er Chris Giunchigli­ani, walked amid the shattered bottles, picking up trash and painting over graffiti at the Sunrise Trailhead.

With the upcoming Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service on Monday, the cleanup — also billed as an MLK day of service — coincided nicely because “it’s a time when a lot of people are motivated to go out and volunteer,” said the park’s recreation cultural specialist, Crystalaur­a Jackson.

Several boys with Cub Scout Pack 313 poked through the brush, dragging rakes behind them and using extended grabbers to pick debris out of the dirt.

“We come out and ride our bikes and hike,” said 10-year-old Charlie Peters, who had been picking up glass with his dad.

“Once we launched rockets here,” his little brother, 7-year-old Benjamin Peters, interjecte­d.

Benjamin struggled to keep a black trash bag over his shoulder, and his older brother fiddled with a wooden rake. While the boys were there primarily to get their community service badges, they believed in the cause of the cleanup.

“I think the reason is to keep the animals safe and all that,” Charlie said.

“And a lot of animals might think the trash is food and then might eat it and then get sick and die,” Benjamin interrupte­d again.

Mike Peters, the boys’ father, said he tries to teach them to “leave it better than you found it.”

Saturday’s event was part of the Wetlands Hands On program, which offers volunteer stewardshi­p opportunit­ies on the second Saturday of most months, said Elizabeth Bickmore, park program administra­tor. Project partners include Outside Las Vegas Foundation and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n.

“Because it’s located on the edge of town at the end of the street, it’s often a target for vandalism,” Bickmore said of the Sunrise Trailhead, one of four trailheads at the 2,900acre park in the east Las Vegas Valley. “That’s where people go to get away from prying eyes.

“We want people to take ownership in their park, and that’s why we get volunteers out here,” she said.

Kristen Taylor, a 34-year-old interior designer for MGM Grand, said she found the event through a list of volunteer opportunit­ies at her work.

“My new year’s resolution was to volunteer more,” Taylor said as she used a paint roller to cover graffiti on a shade structure.

On the opposite side of the same pole was Kelly Choy, a 30-year-old nurse, who said she was inspired by her friend’s new year’s resolution spelled out in the hashtag, “#365daysofo­pportunity.”

Choy, who was born and raised in Las Vegas but had never ventured to the Wetlands Park before Saturday’s event, said the hashtag is about “doing new things and doing what we can to help the community.”

“We’re just having fun on a Saturday, enjoying Las Vegas,” she said.

The trailhead — a nearly 8-mile drive from the park’s visitor center — has been closed since August to make improvemen­ts, but park staff hope to reopen the trailhead soon, Bickmore said.

Chig Foley, a 66-year-old volunteer who has lived in Las Vegas for 17 years, said he remembers when the park didn’t exist and the only people using the wetlands were homeless people in tents and pickup drivers dumping trash.

“It’s giving people a bit of ownership, a sense of inclusion,” Foley said of the park’s volunteer programs. Foley, a Nevada Naturalist volunteer, also participat­es in Wetlands Watch, a program encouragin­g park frequenter­s to report graffiti or trash and to inform other visitors about park rules.

“The park is not somebody else’s; it is theirs,” Foley said of Saturday’s crew. “And maybe in that way, (volunteeri­ng) gives them a little more appreciati­on of helping keep it clean.”

Anthony Turner, 35, took part in the cleanup effort with the local graduate chapter of his fraternity, Phi Beta Sigma. His fraternity’s national chapter made building and maintainin­g parks a priority last year, he said.

“You’re always supposed to get involved with your community. You’re the ones that help it get better and help it grow and improve,” Turner said. “You can’t complain if you’re not out there putting in the work.”

 ?? BRETT LE BLANC/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @BLEBLANCPH­OTO ?? Jessica Smith, 39, right, and Hailey Kervick, 14, clean up trash while volunteeri­ng Saturday at the Sunrise Trailhead in the Clark County Wetlands Park during a Martin Luther King day of service.
BRETT LE BLANC/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @BLEBLANCPH­OTO Jessica Smith, 39, right, and Hailey Kervick, 14, clean up trash while volunteeri­ng Saturday at the Sunrise Trailhead in the Clark County Wetlands Park during a Martin Luther King day of service.
 ??  ?? Jessica Smith, 39, picks up shards of glass while volunteeri­ng Saturday at the Sunrise Trailhead in the Clark County Wetlands Park. Because of the park’s location, it’s often a target of vandalism, said Elizabeth Bickmore, park program administra­tor.
Jessica Smith, 39, picks up shards of glass while volunteeri­ng Saturday at the Sunrise Trailhead in the Clark County Wetlands Park. Because of the park’s location, it’s often a target of vandalism, said Elizabeth Bickmore, park program administra­tor.

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