FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Mike Atkins or Drew
Cope
PROJECT:
R.A.K.E.
Ground Zero Youth
Ministry
New
London
Church
1986 Newark
Road /
P.O. Box 269
New London, PA 19360
Phone: 610-869-7332
(office)
Fax:
610-869-4733
Email:
info@ProjectRake.com
Web site: www.ProjectRake.com
Project Rake Teenagers Partner with Make A Difference
Day
New
London, PA –
November 5,
2003 – Over 50 people from Project: R.A.K.E.
provided free home repairs to low income families and senior citizens on
national Make a Difference Day, October 25th. Project: R.A.K.E. assisted 12
families and 2 social service organizations with some badly needed repairs to
their homes and buildings. 32
Teenagers and 19 adults worked all day replacing plumbing & installing a new
pressure tank, painting, cleaning out and reattaching rain gutters, installing
new downspouts, repairing heater ducts, hanging drywall, building landings and
steps, rewiring two whole electrical circuits that had gone bad, replacing
rotten sink countertops, converting a dining room into a handicap accessible
bedroom for a woman with cerebral palsy, winterizing an air conditioner,
securing loose steps, hanging a new exterior door, replacing windows and a host
of other repairs. These teens want
to make a difference in their community, one family at a time.
The day started
for the teens at 8
AM. Everyone met in the sanctuary of New
London Presbyterian Church [NLPC] to get their team assignments and to learn a
little bit about their homeowners.
The Crew Chiefs who would be leading the work that day met at the supply
garage nearly an hour earlier to be briefed on the day’s events and to load up
on tools and supplies. After
Mike Atkins, Project: R.A.K.E. director and the pastor of children and youth at
the church gave a run down on the day’s events, he told the teens where they’d
be going.
Steve White &
Jessica Lutz took three teens, Mike McGrath, Tallak Behm & Chrissi Tavel to
the Greer home in Avondale. Mike
Greer and his wife had taken in their mother Louise and his sister Vicky over a
year ago. His sister has cerebral
palsy, and both she and Louise are on over 15 prescriptions each month to assist
them with health issues. Mike had
converted one room of his home into a makeshift bedroom for her with a private
bathroom. He was concerned
that it was a little small and hard to maneuver a wheel chair in and out of it
because of a 4 foot high cabinet / serving bar that spanned the center of the
room. Together, the crew
removed the cabinet, cleared the room and removed the old carpet and cleaned up
the floor. They also installed two
short ramps to help Vicky be able to get in and out of the house easier and down
into the family dining room for meals.
Bob Henriksen
took Tyler Weitzel and Josh Mericle to Edward McDonough’s home in
Oxford. Ed had a problem last year when his
bathroom pipes froze & burst destroying his bathroom. The insurance company paid him enough to
replace the pipes, insulation and drywall, but not enough to get the tub, toilet
& sink reinstalled. Over the
past three RAKE weekends, we have gotten these fixtures replaced. Bob’s crew worked on doing some finish
spackling of the drywall and prepared the room for a fresh coat of
paint.
Ernie McGrath and
Lori Nichol took Josh Barrington, Sean
Way, & Jen Kreps
to the home of Ritza Hazen in Coatesville.
Ritza also experienced problems with pipes freezing last winter. They destroyed the walls in her den and
created a mold problem. Lori led
several teens in replacing the insulation and drywall around the new pipes while
Ernie and Ritza’s son, Alex, worked on repairing holes in the heater duct work
that had been present since they moved in three years ago. She said she hasn’t had heat in the
upstairs bedrooms since she moved in because all of holes in the
ducts.
John Barrington,
Dee Loux and Wendy Marinelli took seven teens into the homes of three
generations of Rochester family in
Kennett
Square. We worked with the children and
teens there, teaching them how to paint and make general repairs around the
home. After inspecting the work and
talking with the homeowners, Joan Holiday of the Chester County Health
Department said, “Your mission of helping those in need in a way that builds
their self-esteem and involvement has outcomes which are
immeasurable.”
We installed a
new pressure tank for Marcella Severt of Nottingham. Marcella is a widow who just had her
second stroke and really needs our prayers right now. We sent a crew to the Chester County
Women’s Services center in Coatesville to help them paint a bathroom, their
front and back door, as well as the new fire windows and doors that they had
installed to bring them up to code.
Teens also visited the new facilities of La Comunidad on
State
Street in
Kennett
Square assisting them
with preparations to move in. This
included moving boxes and some extensive painting. In Nottingham, Silvia Hicks
had a faucet that leaked for years.
When we replaced the faucet in August, we discovered that the countertop
had extensive water damage.
Several teens helped install a new counter for her on Saturday. Her sister, Belle Hicks, needed
some boards tightened on her front steps and a bag placed over her air
conditioner and taped down to protect it this winter. They took care of that too.
Crews traveled
from Nottingham, to
Oxford, to
Lincoln
University, to Atglen, to
Coatesville, to Kennett
Square helping
homeowners all over southern Chester
County. Termed PROJECT: R.A.K.E., this team of
students and adults, through the generous donations of local businesses and
individuals, provided free labor to improve the living conditions of low income
area families and senior citizens. The goal is to get teenagers involved in
the needs of their community and spread Jesus’ love through Random Acts of
Kindness Everywhere.
The actual
inception of the program grew out of one student’s desire to take a summer
mission experience she’d had through Ground Zero, into her own community. Atkins explains, “Two years ago, while
we were on our summer mission trip to Rock Hill, SC, Sarah Abel came and told me
that she would love to do something like this (helping the community) where we
live. I asked her to call some
agencies when we got back home and told her we would see what we could do. A few days later she had called 8
different agencies and had an interview already set up!” The program’s name is based on a concept
that Columbine victim, Rachel Scott, wrote about in her diary a few weeks before
she was tragically killed. Rachel
believed that if one person would perform an act of kindness, it would begin a
chain reaction of others doing random acts of kindness.
Now, 2 years
later, over 250 teenagers have worked together with adult leaders to make a
tangible difference in the lives of over 65 families in our communities. Atkins
said, “We want students to take an active role in their community; but if
nothing else, we want those who do not participate [in Project: RAKE] to, at the
very least, let this ‘Project’ inspire them to get involved in their community
and help someone in a real, tangible way.”
Ground Zero is
the Youth Ministry of New London Presbyterian Church located in historic
New
London,
PA. Ground Zero meets weekly on Fridays from
7 to
9:30
PM for middle
school age to college/career age and also on Sunday mornings from
11am
-12:15
PM at the
church. All 6th-12th grade
students are invited to attend. New
London Presbyterian Church is located at 1986 Newark Road/Rt. 896, 20 minutes
north of Newark,
DE just minutes
south of State
Rd. in the heart of
New
London. For more information about Ground Zero
or Project RAKE, please call the GZ Office at 610/869-7332 or visit
www.ProjectRake.com.
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