Get to the Point, Volume XX, Issue Four

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GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014 1


CONTENTS

IN THIS

ISSUE 04

Feature

Revisit the many thoughts that cross a brand new Corps Members mind, then add the elements of fire!

06

Gallery Images from Round 1

I’m a member of the National Civilian Community Corps, an AmeriCorps Program.

↑ Buffalo 4 members

08

Counselors Corner Laura Tuck raises the Corps

spend quality time with volunteers from their

awareness on alcohol and the

worksite in New Jersey.

realistic tolls it can take on a

NCCC members are 18 to 24 and spend 10 months getting things done for America

persons life.

10

Join Fox 5 as they went on a cross

while developing their own leadership. We serve on teams to help communities prepare for and respond to disasters, build homes,

Feature country journey to Alaska.

12

Staff Spotlight You saw him often during CTI,

and help the environment.

now get to know our Logistics Assistant, Drew Scott.

To learn more, visit NationalService.gov or call 1.800.942.2677

14

Alumni Spotlight Meet Megan Rawson, a past NCCC Team Leader.

CONNECT WITH AMERICORPS NCCC ATLANTIC REGION Adriana Bayona Community Relations Support Team Leader (CRSTL) Phone: 443.758.4573 ● Email: Adriana20.nccc@gmail.com

16

Feature Buffalo 1 members learn the why behind the what on their project site.

Facebook.com/NCCCAtlanticRegion @AmeriCorpsNCCC

18

Team Project Map Have teams moved or

NationalService.gov

continued to serve in the same location? Check it out to see. About the cover: (Top Left): Members of Phoenix 1 dig a fire line. (Center): Fox 5 being award by their first project JFO. (Bottom Right): Members of Buffalo 3 use a circular saw in their rebuilding efforts.

2 GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014


BULLETI N B O ARD

!!! n o o s g ld n i e i f m the Co n i a s g n m i a eiv Te c e r I F be I l l i w eW l b ke a t a r t o p to n o i ect e! n k n i o p c ns o t ou

AmeriCorp s NCCC is going gre en and encourag ing Environme ntal Stewardsh ip throughou t April for Earth Day 2014! GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014 3


FE ATURE

WHAT DOES IT REALLY TAKE?

S

ince I got notified of my acceptance to AmeriCorps NCCC’s Atlantic Region my mind has been flooded with infinite questions. Upon finally arriving to Vicksburg, Mississippi I thought this feeling would end, I was wrong. I reassured myself that the feeling wouldn’t continue, but it carried on. Just when I believed that all my questions had been answered I was thrown a curve ball and everything was mixed up again! Being on Phoenix One there was an eminence amount of questions rushing through my head wondering how everything would work out. I’d wonder if I was cut out for it all, not only the Phoenix Unit but NCCC in it’s entirety. At the very first Phoenix meeting we all learned about the wild land fire training the Phoenix Unit would receive in the up incoming week. A week, five days of classroom training, followed by a few tests. I sat there wondering how can you learn everything you need to know in a week!? It was an impossible feeling coursing through my mind. The

PHOENIX 1

first day of fire camp they issued us these dark green cargo pants and this mustard yellow button-up, a helmet, a pair of leather gloves and fire boots. You cannot help but think to yourself, “This is supposed to keep me safe?” Shrugging it off I decided to trust my equipment and NCCC as a whole. After the first few days of training I started to realize how much we have all learned. On Phoenix One's first prescribed burn, I watched my fellow members of Phoenix One walk through tall grass, deep woods and thick patches of thrones with fire blazing behind them. All totally calm and collected, it felt like we had all been doing this for years and years. Then finally after weeks of being full of self-doubt and confusion I finally felt like I was starting to understand. The weeks of CTI and fire camp are put in place to give us knowledge that we need and to prepare us for every difficulty we’d encounter. The confidence we need and the ability to use those skills was

“All the personal protective equipment in the world couldn’t replace the heart you need to survive on the fire line.”

4 GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014

BY: SHELBY PARKES


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within us all there before we even got on the plane Vicksburg! It took something special to fill out and submit that application, and actually get on the plane. Committing 10 months of your life to stay with complete strangers to help out other Americans, no one can teach you how to do that. But the bigger challenge that we face as members of the Phoenix Unit is utilizing our common sense, confidence and shear will power to press on. All the personal protective equipment in the world couldn’t replace the heart you need to survive on the fire line, when you’re walking through a heavy field of grass up to your waist fire is chasing you out of the field. Your heart is racing, and you can’t quite decipher if the beads of sweat running down your face are caused the extreme heat of the fire or the simple fact that you are nervous. It is your personal will to reach excellence and your commitment to go that extra mile to get there. When the days are longer than your body can handle, everything within you is getting weak. Among every step thrones are ripping through the skin of your legs, and your environment stealing the life left in your body, yet you keep lifting your boots off of the ground. That heart and that drive, that is what keeps you safe that is what brings you home at the end of the day. That’s what it takes to you

GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014 5


SPI KE G ALLE RY

Let them eat cake! On April 1st, Fox 6 members gathered to help celebrate FEMA’s 35th birthday!

→ Just in time for spring, Charles Turner of Moose 4, gives some “April Showers” to various budding greens in Camden, NJ. ↓

We’re all in this together! Buffalo 3 members capture their time together with the homeowner and of home they have recently weatherized in Bath, ME.

6 GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014


SPI KE G ALLE RY

It’s a lovely day for a CAP event. Fox 3 CAP Representatives spent the day CAPing at a International Kite festival in South Carolina.

← Big load, no problem! Arielle Merkle supports disaster repairmen efforts on the Raven 3 worksite in New Jersey. ↓

Jamie Berent, Moose 2, puts up a protective barrier for a tree shelter.

← (Bottom) One could possibly interpret Buffalo 4 members, Robert Henderson and Alyssa Morin, pose as an AmeriCorps NCCC twist on the old classic “American Gothic”.

GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014 7


COUNSELOR CORNER

Alcohol Awareness:

The Key to Community Change, Personal and Family Recovery

Twenty Eight Years of Improving and Saving Lives Through Prevention, Treatment and Recovery

E

ach April since 1987, the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc. (NCADD) sponsors NCADD Alcohol Awareness Month to increase public awareness and understanding, reduce stigma and encourage local communities to focus on alcoholism and alcohol-related issues. This April, NCADD highlights the important public health issue of underage drinking, a problem with devastating individual, family and community consequences. With this year's theme, "Help for Today, Hope for Tomorrow," the month of April will be filled with local, state, and national events aimed at educating people about the treatment and prevention of alcoholism. Local NCADD Affiliates as well as schools, colleges, churches, and countless other community organizations will sponsor a host of activities that create awareness and encourage individuals and families to get help for alcohol-related problems.

all illegal drugs combined. •Each day, 7,000 kids in the United States under the age of 16 take their first drink. •Those who begin drinking before age 15 are four times more likely to develop alcoholism than those who begin at age 21. •More than 1,700 college students in the U.S. are killed each year—about 4.65 a day—as a result of alcoholrelated injuries. •25% of U.S. children are exposed to alcohol-use disorders in their family. •Underage alcohol use costs the nation an estimated $62 billion annually. Reducing underage drinking is critical to securing a healthy future for America's youth and requires a cooperative effort from parents, schools, community organizations, business leaders, government agencies, the entertainment industry, alcohol manufacturers/retailers and young people.

Alcohol use by young people is Alcohol Free Weekend: April 4-6, extremely dangerous—both to 2014 themselves and to society, and is directly associated with traffic fatalities, violence, suicide, educational failure, alco- Alcohol free weekend is designed to raise public awarehol overdose, unsafe sex and other problem behaviors. ness of the use of alcohol and how it may be affecting indiAnnually, over 6,500 people under the age of 21 die from viduals, families, and the community. Please share with us alcohol-related accidents and thousands more are injured. your ideas and celebrations of team events without alcohol at ltuck@cns.gov Additionally: Respectfully, •Alcohol is the number one drug of choice for America's young people, and is more likely to kill young people than Laura Tuck 8 GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014


Missed Alcohol Free Weekend? It is not too late!! Reach out to your peers and plan some fun non alcohol related weekend activities! GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014 9


A Story of Fox 5 Venturing into the Artic

Written by: John Roberts, Fox 5

ADVENTURES TO ALASKA

FE ATURE

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wake early for the journey, with the snow on the ground and cold wind blowing. Fox 5 barrel rolls into their van excited but tired, the team heads to the Dulles airport. Starting their journey to Alaska to help the National Incident Management Assistance Team East (NIMAT East), with Alaska Shield training and exercise. But before we get into all that let’s give a little background on Atlantic Region Fox 5 and the Alaska Shield training. Fox 5 is comprised of second year FEMA Corps Members; each member is trained in different areas. The team has three female foxes Megan, Molly, and Adrienne, and four males foxes Nick, Ryan, John and team leader Chris. Fox 5 will be working directly with NIMAT East for their whole term of service. The NIMAT East travels throughout the nation responding to disasters, which ensures that Fox 5 will be traveling a whole lot this year. The task that Fox 5 is assisting in during this project is a disaster EXERCISE, the exercise is as follows: on

10 GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014

Thursday, March 27th, 2014 at 2:10pm EDT, an earthquake of preliminary magnitude 9.2 occurred 76 miles east of Anchorage, Alaska at a depth of 3.7 miles. The center of the earthquake was 76 miles East of Anchorage, Alaska and 58 miles South-East of Butte, Alaska. The earthquake was five minutes long. This exercise is based off a real event that happened 50 years ago. Alaska state and local, region 10 and NIMAT are all in Alaska to train and practice for if this event ever happened again. Fox 5 makes all connections to the rainy city of Seattle; Washington from here the journey gets exciting. The team heads to Joint Base Lewis- McChord to get airlifted in a C-17 to Anchorage, Alaska. The team is ready for a ride they will never forget. The plane is loaded with a Mobile Emergency Response System truck, equipment and a hand full of FEMA employees. The team takes off like a fox in the C-17 and makes a cold landing at Joint Base Elmendorf and Richardson (JBER) in Anchorage, Alaska. The team heads for rest and sleep for the next day will be preliminary tasks before the exer-


FE ATURE

cise. With a day to adjust to time and weather the team heads to the IOF back at JBER. The team separates into their areas of specialty: Nick to disaster servicer assistance, John to individual assistance, Megan to public assistance, Molly to planning, Ryan to logistics, Adrienne to external affairs, and Chris making sure all the foxes play nicely. For three days the team is at the IOF, learning what the first steps are after a disaster happens and what each specialty role does. Once setup, everyone moves to downtown the heart of Anchorage to the JFO. The team works hard playing out the exercise as if it’s a real event, thinking of survivors and the area affected. During the time the team was in Alaska they saw the northern lights, a moose and explored the downtown area of Anchorage. The team stayed 8 days in Alaska to only want to stay for longer. Fox 5made their way back to Herndon, Virginia and is headed to Texas next. Fox Five is on the move again to another adventure!

Virginia

Washington

Alaska

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ST AFF SPOTLI GH T

An interview with our resident music man

Mr. Drew J. Scott The Logistics Assistant at the Atlantic Region

AB: You recently joined the Atlantic Region Staff [January 2014] will you share with the Corps what some of work your history?

By: Adriana Bayona CRSTL

DS: Most of my work history involves working with youth and young adults through educational and mentoring programs. Because of my past experiences, I look forward to the opportunity to meet new people in NCCC and the opportunity to assist our Corps Members as they make positive improvements around our country. AB: I’ve heard you are concurrently attending college while working, is this true? DS: Yes! I attended The University of West Georgia and studied Integrated Studies in Music Business. I am currently attending Cecil College completing a degree in Procurement & Acquisition. AB: Wow! That is commendable. outside of school, what exactly does the Logistics Assistant role do? DS: Serves in the operations department assisting with clerical needs. Also responsible for procuring supplies and tools that related to the success of our Corps Members, Team Leaders and Support Team Leaders.

“Love is like music, you learn all the rules, then forget the rules and play by the heart. “

AB: Thank you for all the “behind the scenes” work you do! When should Corps Members come to you. DS: Anything logistics related, but also for guidance and advice on future endeavors. AB: Work/life balance is important, what do you do in your spare time, what are some of your hobbies? DS: MUSIC! MUSIC! MUSIC! I enjoy singing, writing music, discovering new artists and cooking. On my weekends, I like to have fun with friends, just having a simple “kick-back” like bowling, and going to visit Atlanta when I can. AB: Is there something thatyou haven’t done or want to accomplish? DS: I haven’t done it yet, but I’m making plans to go sky diving in the near future. AB: I’ve gone and loved it, so I’m sure you will too. How about the further down the line, what are some of your future goals? DS: To live a happy and healthy life, with a beautiful wife, five kids, and a wonderful career, all while pleasing God. AB: Sounds achievable! Lastly, if someone were to get in your good graces by cooking a meal, what meal would that be? DS: Grilled salmon and garlic green beans with freshly shredded parmesan cheese! 12 GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014


RECIPES

H

aving a busy work schedule definitely plays a role in the dinner choices we make throughout the week. If the team is finding themselves in a tough spot finding cooking time, try this two for one trick! Cook a easy meal one night and use the lefts overs and a few extra ingredients to create a quick dish the second night. This technique can be used in many different ways, let this chicken based recipe be your inspiration!

First Night:

Baked Lemon Pepper Chicken with Sautéed Vegetables

Directions:

Ingredients: 

 

Fresh cut up or frozen vegetables: broccoli, peas, carrots, potatatos {whatever you like}

Heat oven to 400ºF Season chicken with lemon pepper seasoning to your liking Bake for 25 minutes or until fully cooked

2-4-1

1 lb chicken tenders (cut up)

Boil various vegetables until tender strain and season accordingly

The art of making two meals out of one recipe! Ingredients:  

2 cups cut-up left over vegetables 1 cup cut-up left overcooked chicken 1 can condensed cream of chicken soup

1 can condensed cream of celery

2 Pillsbury dough sheets

Second Night:

Directions:  

Heat oven to 400ºF Butter and then line pan with dough sheet

Hodge-Podge Chicken Pot Pie

Extra Tips: 

Mix vegetables, chicken and soup then pour over dough in pan

Place other dough sheet on top of mix

Bake 30 minutes or until golden brown

Add more flavor by using various herbs and seasonings: pepper, oregano and dill weed are all good options. Change the flavor by using another variety of condensed creamy soup. GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014 13


ALUM NI SPOTLI GHT

Alumni Spotlight with

Megan RawsonSouthern // Class XIX Region River 4 Team Leader Interview by: Meghan Lange & Rhiannon Williams

How did you find out about AmeriCorps NCCC? I actually happened upon the program while searching for other AmeriCorps programs in the portal! While I knew I was interested in doing environmental work, I wasn't quite sure to what specifically I wanted to commit a year of service. NCCC presented an opportunity for me to try a little bit of everything through its different service areas, while at the same time giving back to multiple communities and being able to work with a team, which really enticed me. How did NCCC impact your life? Honestly, in my year with NCCC, I experienced some of the lowest lows and highest highs I've ever had; even more overwhelmingly, those moments sometimes happened in the same 24 hours. I think once you've made it through a year with NCCC, you definitely come out stronger for it – I made some of the best friends I think I'll ever have; I learned where I can improve my skills, leadership and otherwise; and my team and I were also able to work with some pretty amazing sponsors, community members and local organizations along the way. I suppose most of all, my time with NCCC confirmed that I want to have a career in service and nonprofit work. What skills did you gain? I think two of the areas in which I developed most are my patience and my ability to share empathy with others – though I came into the program feeling very confident in both of these skills, I found myself reevaluating how I was doing every so often when I was having difficulties with my team. I think developing “soft” skills is similar to weight lifting; as you put what you know into practice, you lift and tear your muscle, which can be challenging, painful and even humbling, but after some time and in the end, you find yourself stronger than you ever thought you could be. What is your favorite aspect? My favorite aspects of the program are the traveling and the variety of service areas we do projects in. Most people who do the program haven't had the opportunity to travel like we were able to, or if they had, they haven't seen the low-income communities we work in in the same way. It really is an eye-opening way to see what for many is a different part of the country. It's also illuminating to find so many different kinds of work to do and so many fascinating, kind and well-meaning people along the way.

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ALUM NI SPOTLI GHT

What was your favorite project?

United Saints Recovery Project in New Orleans – we worked alongside our sister team, Delta 4 (Team 4 love!), This is a tough one! I actually like to think that my team's and managed volunteers; we worked to use large art pieccollection of projects throughout our year ended up being es created by local high school students to help board up the best overall (no offense to the other 16 teams...). abandoned buildings that Though I have several favorites, were being used as crack the one nearest and dearest to my dens and clean up the lots heart is the seven and a half surrounding them. It was a weeks we spent working with true community collaboraSherman Avenue Elementary, in tion, and the end result didn't dear old Vicksburg, MS (home only make the area safer, the base to the Southern Region). beauty of it was striking. My team was the first team to work with Sherman; we spent What are you doing now? time tutoring and mentoring PreI've actually relocated across K through 3rd graders, from the the country to Portland, Orebeginning to the end of their gon (I'm originally from school days (and sometimes beNewtown, CT) to live with a yond)! We worked in classrooms, few of my fellow Class 19 TLs. the library and art room and even I'm working in a local ice the cafeteria as well as for special cream shop while I search for events – I saw my team connect the right nonprofit job, but individually with students in such I'm planning on starting to different ways, but it was the kind add volunteering with some of project where everyone's local organizations as soon as strengths could be put to use. my schedule settles! Though most of the work we do in NCCC is very quantifiable (this project was too), it was the more Any addition information you would like to intangible things that left the biggest mark – it was the share? high fives, grins and hugs given, If I could share any advice the shoulders cried on and the with current and future NCCC tears wiped; we shared their tri-ers, I would pass on two umphs and trials, and along the things: 1. My Unit Leader told way, we learned a thing or two us during TLT, “If you don't about what it takes to succeed want to raise your hand when when the odds are stacked someone asks for volunteers against you. for a task, you probably Most memorable ISP? should. You'll learn something.” 2. Look for and reI loved many of the ISPs that we member the good in your did. The classics – animal shelteammates, your fellow Corps ters (Woot! Puppies!), a Color members and situations, esRun (Yellow is the happiest colpecially when the going gets or) and a Kaboom! Build - were tough. I found an attitude of all highlights. However, one of gratitude invaluable to sucmy favorites was working with cessfully and sanely completing my year of service!

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FE ATURE

I

’ve noticed it’s not always easy to remember the people you're helping.

My team, Buffalo 1, is currently working in New Jersey, in the towns of Moonachie and Little Ferry. We're doing disaster recovery in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, which day-to-day means we're working with the Volunteer Center of Bergen County, Volunteer Organizations Active in Disaster, as well as Rebuilding Together and Habitat for Humanity through them. We're laying concrete, renovating houses, painting, and at times, getting pretty muddy. It's physical labor and we go home dirty at the end of each day.

BRINGING IT HOME A realization of the impact you can have on a single person or a community as a whole.

By: Ethan Reber and Ta-Jah Gordan, Buffalo 1 16 GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014

Surprisingly, as “cool” as all that sounds, we still often feel a little out of touch with the people we're helping. “I didn't really understand what had gone on here in the last two years,” said Ta-Jah Gordon, a fellow Buffalo 1 teammate. “I didn't understand what these people had lived through, and what the work we were doing meant to them.” After a while, when you really get to know the residents of these towns, you get a stronger sense of who they are—they stop being “homeowners” and start becoming human beings. One week, we were out in Little Ferry, laying down a concrete base to build a deck for a disabled couple, who we were having some difficulty connecting with. “They kinda seemed at first like they weren't very grateful,” said Eric Poencet, another member of Buffalo One. I have to admit, I felt like they were sort of picky about how we were working, mainly because they kept hovering over us throughout the day.


FE ATURE

“That was a real eye-opener. These people had been ignored for a really long time, and we were reminded again why we had come to New Jersey in the first place.” We came to understand as the day progressed; how they had been affected by Hurricane Sandy, and how those feelings simultaneously affected us. Towards the end of the day, they warmed up to us a lot. I’m not sure if it was because they respected our work ethic, or our goodnatured attitude, but they did. “They bought us donuts, and the female homeowner gave us all hugs afterwards, and gave me a kiss on the cheek, which was a little weird, but it was cool,” said Eric. We realized we'd forgotten to see these people as people, who had been through a lot and just wanted to see that the work they needed done was done right.

needed help; though our help may be small, it is something. Our time in New Jersey has shown us that people really are grateful for the work we do—it just, may be hard to see it, or even for them show it sometimes. Everyone has a story, and it takes time to learn them.

During one of our first Independent Service Projects in New Jersey, Co'Tiah Isley, one of my Buffalo 1 teammates and I, had a chance to sit down with a couple who told us the story of what they experienced during Sandy. “We woke up, and all our stuff was under three or four feet of water,” they said. “We've been living in an apartment for the last couple of years.” We were surprised. They still hadn't moved into their house? “No,” they said. “After all this time, there's too much water damage, and a bunch of our stuff is gone. We can't move back.” That was a real eye-opener. These people had been ignored for a really long time, and we were reminded again why we had come to New Jersey in the first place. Like the couple who seemed too picky, or even the homeowners we never get to meet while out on projects, we realized that pivotal “a-ha” moment—people still

GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014 17


TE AM PROJE CT M AP

Where are they now? Round 1, Week 5 FOX 1: Forest Hills, NY

Sandy Recovery Office- Public Assistance FOX 2: Emmitsburg, VA Emergency Management Institute - Public Assistance Task Force FOX 3: Atlanta, GA Region IV Headquarters/Atlantic Distribution Center - Logistics FOX 4: Lindcroft, NJ Sandy Recovery Office - Disaster Survivor Assistance FOX 5: Dallas, TX IMAT (Incident Management Assistance Team) FOX 6: Lindcroft, NJ Sandy Recovery Office Planning

BUFFALO 1 Moonachie, NJ

MOOSE 2 Baltimore, MD

RAVEN 1 Camden, NJ

Volunteer Center of Bergen County - Disaster Services

Baltimore County EPA & Sustainability -

Camden Children’s Garden - Urban and

Environmental Stewardship

Rural Development

MOOSE 3 Baltimore, MD

RAVEN 2 Marshfield, MA

Baltimore Recreation & Park - Environmental

MA Audubon Northfield - Infrastructure

Stewardship

Improvement

MOOSE 4 Camden, NJ

RAVEN 3 Toms River, NJ

The Center for Environmental Transformation Urban and Rural Development

Jersey Cares – Disaster Services

BUFFALO 4 Garden City, NY NECHAMA - Disaster Services

MOOSE 5 Rockaway, NY

MOOSE 1 Catonsville, MD

St. Bernard Project, Friends of Rockaway - Disaster Services

BUFFALO 2 Hookstown, PA Raccoon Creek State Park - Environmental Stewardship BUFFALO 3 Bath, ME Habitat for Humanity 7 River - Energy Conservation

Great Kids Farm - Infrastructure Improvement

RAVEN 4 Deep River, CT Incarnation Center - Urban and Rural Developement PHOENIX 1 Cambridge, MD Black Water Refuge USFWS - Disaster Services

18 GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014


SHOUTS OUTS

“Shout out to Nicole Allen for always willing to help others with their specialty role!”

“ Miss and love you Mikey! We miss your lovely locks and humor and everyone from Plymouth is sad you ‘ain't around’.”

RAVEN 1

RAVEN 2

“Sending love and well wishes to you Taylor Davis! Hope all is well :)”

“FEMA can you squat!? From the Moose Unit.”

HOPE MARTINDALE

“Shout out to Marilyn Ponce for going above and beyond on any task given to her!”

“Thanks Rufus for being an awesome ATL!”

MOOSE 5 MOOSE 4

MOOSE 1

“Way to go Justin Gandy, with 40 ISP hours already!”

Shout Outs?

Shouts Outs are short messages submitted by teams when they have them through the WPR to share with the rest of the Corps.

PROGRAMS DEPARTMENT

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20 GET TO THE POINT | April 8, 2014

Moose 1, 2 & 3, participating in an ‘Alcohol Free Weekend’ with a outdoor potluck celebration.

Atlantic Region Support Team Leaders and local Baltimore teams,


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