Spending a summer of service
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Angelique Flores
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- While some come to Surf City to enjoy the sand and
surf, a group of teens are spending most of their time at the corner of
Yorktown Avenue and Florida Street.
The group is giving Habitat for Humanity a hand in building two homes.
Thirteen 16- and 17-year-olds, mostly from the East Coast, have signed
up for a summer camp through the American Jewish Society for Service that
has brought them to Orange County for volunteer work.
The group arrived in the city about a month ago to a large empty dirt
lot. Now, the foundation has been laid in preparation for two
single-family homes for low-income families.
“We definitely did a lot even though it doesn’t look like it,” said
Ilana Jerud, 16, of New Jersey. “But it’s stuff that needed to get done.”
The service organization offers a six-week summer camp for high school
students who have completed the 10th grade and are at least 16. The New
York-based group was founded 50 years ago to provide a volunteer
experience for teens and to assist with construction on projects in
communities throughout the country.
Most of the camp projects include housing projects, such as replacing
windows, painting homes, building community centers and rehabilitating
homeless shelters. The campers must pass an application process and pay a
$2,500 tuition plus air fare expenses.
“They are a special group of kids to do this when they could be at
home with their friends,” camp director Jonathan Hirsh said.
Before coming to Huntington Beach, where they’ve spent most of their
time, the students performed landscaping work in Santa Ana and Stanton.
But the summer camp hasn’t been all work. The teens have been able to
enjoy Huntington Beach, as well as trips to San Diego and Los Angeles.
The group is staying with counselors from the Jewish organization at a
Habitat for Humanity house in Rancho Santa Margarita, where the teens
wake up at 5 a.m. and arrive at their work site at 7 a.m. The
sun-drenched workers toil until 3:30 p.m. All the training the teens have
received has been on the job.
“Building a house isn’t as easy as it looks,” Jerud said.
Though it’s been hard work, the students are still having fun working
together. And though they could have picked a more restful way to spend
the summer, many said they would do it again.
“I wanted to do community service and help give back to people in
need,” said Jamie Sloyer, 16, of Long Island. “The work has been hard and
challenging. In the end it will be rewarding.”
Today is the group’s last day of work. Habitat for Humanity will
finish where the teens have left off.
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