The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Local News

July 8, 2012

AmeriCorps volunteers plant garden on Day of Service

JOPLIN, Mo. — The interior of Susan Irish’s tornado-damaged house is not quite ready for occupants again.

But the landscaping around the house got a much-needed makeover Sunday thanks to a group of young AmeriCorps volunteers.

“It would not have happened without all of these wonderful people, these angels that have come,” Irish said.

About 20 members of the AmeriCorps National Civilian Community Corps, a service program for young adults 18 through 24, braved the heat Sunday afternoon to tackle a variety of outdoor projects around Irish’s house, 1824 Grand Ave. Volunteers planted flowers, mowed and trimmed the yard, and cleaned and organized the backyard.

Irish was home with her boxer, Rufus, when the tornado hit on May 22, 2011. They rode it out in the hallway. The tornado ruined the roof and the house’s northern rooms. Irish moved into an empty rental owned by her son, where she has been living since.

Her house, which was built by Irish’s father in the late 1940s and has been owned by the family since, is nearly livable again. Volunteers with Rebuild Joplin, a local organization focused on getting housing to tornado-impacted residents, have repaired the interior and the roof. A few “cosmetic things” are all that remain to be done, Irish said.

“Everyone has done an absolutely beautiful job, and they just have such good hearts,” she said. “I’ve never really been a volunteer — shame on me — but everybody’s so wonderful. I’m just so grateful. It’s just above and beyond what I ever expected.”

Helen Kyriakoudes, 18, of Bay St. Louis, Miss., has been in Joplin about two months with the rest of the AmeriCorps group. Working with AmeriCorps through Rebuild Joplin, she has helped repair a number of houses, including sanding and painting at Irish’s.

Having already completed projects in Denver, Oklahoma City and Freeport, Texas, Kyriakoudes said volunteering in Joplin has perhaps resonated the most with her because her hometown is less than an hour’s drive from hurricane-impacted New Orleans.

“There were tons of AmeriCorps people in my town,” she said. “Everyone was helping everyone, and it’s kind of like paying it forward.”

It has been a life-changing experience overall, said Kyriakoudes, who graduated from high school last year.

“I’ve just become way more independent; I learned so much about construction,” she said. “And just meeting the people I’ve met has really changed how I look at life.”

Sabrina Martin, a 19-year-old AmeriCorps volunteer from Olympia, Wash., said that for her, there has been a significant “personal component” to working in Joplin because she has been able to work directly with residents and other volunteers.

“Joplin has brought me so much hope about what a community can go through and come back together,” she said. “It’s an inspiration to keep doing good work.”



By the numbers

About 1,200 young adults nationwide serve in AmeriCorps National Civilian Community Corps each year, completing a series of 6- to 8-week projects during their 10-month term.

Text Only
Local News
  • Sheriff’s funds to pay for two building projects

    Jasper County’s general fund budget may pay some initial costs for renovating and constructing two county buildings, but the final bill for the projects will come from law enforcement sales tax funds.

    May 23, 2013

  • PHOTO Schlanger 2.jpg Pittsburg crews work to repair storm damaged Schlanger Park

    City crews using heavy equipment spent Thursday cleaning up Schlanger Park after a storm tracked through Monday night.

    May 23, 2013 3 Photos

  • No charges to be filed in Joplin shooting case

    The nonfatal shooting of a 25-year-old man at a Joplin residence on May 13 has been deemed justified by authorities. Jacob B. Boykin, 21, of Joplin, shot Justin S. Johnson, 25, of Carterville, once in the chest with a small-caliber handgun at 5260 E. Sunny Acres Lane.

    May 23, 2013

  • Mike Pound: DVD smells like pizza; how great is that?

    Just when I think the rest of the world is passing us by, this great country does something that renews my faith in innovation. It does something that renews my faith in that can-do spirit that led Charles Lindbergh to fly nonstop across the Atlantic, thus leading to the invention of the airplane bathroom.

    May 23, 2013

  • 052313 Turner6_72.jpg Joplin Board of Education to decide fate of East Middle School teacher

    After hearing nearly 10 hours of testimony from more than a dozen witnesses and accepting more than 45 exhibits into evidence, members of the Joplin Board of Education voted to move behind closed doors Thursday night to decide whether Randy Turner, a communication arts teacher at East Middle School, will continue to teach.

    May 23, 2013 2 Photos

  • 052213 gas4_72.jpg Memorial Day travelers bemoan high gas prices

    Norm Hayward and his wife, Claudia, have a couple of things going for them as they continue their increasingly expensive motor home trip around parts of the United States. For starters, the Phoenix, Ariz., couple are saving on hotel costs.

    May 23, 2013 1 Photo

  • Cunningham Park vandalism estimated at $4,000

    Vandals caused an estimated $4,000 worth of damage in Cunningham Park, draining the pool in the aquatic center of about 200,000 gallons of water and throwing some large landscaping rocks into the reflecting pond.

    May 23, 2013

  • Joplin team drove through storm to get to Moore

    It was a long drive in the middle of a severe thunderstorm that had earlier produced a massive tornado in Moore, Okla. With the two-year anniversary of Joplin’s deadly twister approaching on Wednesday, a team of 14 Joplin emergency workers was ready to risk the trip in order to get help to a hurting Moore.

    May 23, 2013

  • Cunningham Park vandalism bill estimated at $4,000

    The city estimates that vandals caused about $4,000 worth of property damage in Cunningham Park, draining the swimming pool of 200,000 gallons of water and moving some large landscaping rocks into the reflecting pond.

    May 23, 2013

  • 052313 Turner1_72.jpg Content of book, students' access to it at issue in hearing for suspended teacher

    A standing-room only crowd is present at the hearing this morning to decide the fate of suspended Joplin Middle School teacher Randy Turner, who has asked for the hearing before the board of education.

    May 23, 2013 1 Photo

Must Read Stories
Photos


Sports
Facebook
Poll

The Institute of Medicine is recommending that schools provide opportunities for at least 60 minutes of physical activity each day for students and that physical education become a core subject. Do you think schools should adopt that program?

Yes.
No.
     View Results
Opinion
Twitter Updates
Follow us on twitter
Follow me on Twitter
Business