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SOUTH LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – A team of 13 AmeriCorps volunteers have been working the last two months, in the Middletown/Cobb area, helping to rebuild homes for uninsured – or underinsured – Valley fire survivors.
They’ve been given lodging in a home donated for their use by longtime local merchant, Grant Hardester.
These volunteers – who are sponsored by two Team Lake County humanitarian agencies, Hope City and North Coast Opportunities – also are helping to build the new volunteer dorms in Middletown Central Park.
In early November the AmeriCorps team was introduced at Team Lake County’s monthly general membership meeting in Middletown.
Twenty-four-year old AmeriCorps spokesperson and team leader, Colleen Moran, addressed Team Lake County members, saying, “There are 13 of us. We’re 18- to 24-four-year olds, coming together to do volunteer service. We’re unskilled labor without any experience. It’s up to the sponsors to teach us.”
Besides learning job skills, Moran explained, “AmeriCorps is about developing interpersonal and leadership skills.”
Each year AmeriCorps volunteers join up for 10 months in single teams that will take on four different, two-month projects.
This has been the first project of the year for Moran’s team. Their last day with Hope City will be Wednesday, Dec. 21. A new AmeriCorps team will take their place here in Middletown on Jan. 11.
On a rainy afternoon in early December, team members were doing inside work on a house on Wardlaw Street near the St. Helena Creek Bridge in Middletown.
Foreman John Ferguson from Clearlake Oaks shouted out, “All right, I need a 6-foot board.”
The framing, roofing and siding was pretty much done and sheetrock was being installed indoors.
“I’ve done a lot of siding. There’s a lot of physically demanding work; like holding up drywall in place while others screw it into the ceiling,” said Darren Wilber, 21.
“It’s rewarding to see the ‘before and after’ results,” Wilber said.
“It took awhile to learn how to hammer nails in straight,” said Raya Koch, a 20-year-old from Connecticut. She prefers battery-powered, portable screwdrivers.
Koch counts teamwork as a blessing, “One of the best things about being in AmeriCorps is working with 12 other people every single day.”
She added, “Coming to Middletown has been totally awesome. I love it here. It makes a difference to work in a place where people are so sweet, kind and generous. Our team volunteered at the community Thanksgiving dinner at Twin Pines Casino Event Center, and it was really cool.”
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“My dad had been in the Peace Corps. He said, ‘Not only can you help others as a volunteer, but you can see the country,'” said Justin Meyers, a 24-year-old from San Antonio, Texas, who recently graduated from college with a bachelor's degree in mathematics.
“I’ve never seen the West,” Meyers added. “I saw the Golden Gate Bridge last weekend. And I saw how crazy it is driving up those steep hills in San Francisco.”
He also observed, “I’m surprised how receptive Middletown is. We’re not viewed as outsiders. It’s cool to hear their story and help them at the same time.”
As their two-month project in Lake County comes to an end, Moran reflected on her team’s time here.
“As an AmeriCorps member, I’ve never had a project so well thought out. Hope City is definitely the most organized, passionate and dedicated program I’ve worked in. The supervisors are focused and hard workers. The community and the sponsors make it easy for all of us to love the work,” she said.
Kevin Cox, chief executive officer of Hope City, said during Team Lake County’s general membership meeting in December, “I want to acknowledge AmeriCorps. Thanks to them, the building continues, and they’re learning some skills. It’s a good ‘give and take.'”
Recent winner of the Stars of Lake County Humanitarian of the Year Award, Sharon Dawson, who lives across the street from where the volunteers have been working, said, “Every morning they come marching down the street like they’re on a field trip. They’re doing something tangible for our community. I love having them here.”
Dennis Purcell is communications committee chair for Team Lake County.
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