Friday, December 9, 2011

Winter Wonderland


    On Saturday, December 3rd, the Mentoring Programs Winter Wonderland Party filled Cataldo Hall with smiles of joy. The Center for Community Action and Service Learning (CCASL) joined with a myriad of volunteer mentors to create a Winter Wonderland Party for over 350 kids involved in both Campus Kids and Connections programs. 

     The Winter Wonderland is a heartfelt time of fellowship for the student mentors in these programs as well as for the mentees and their family members. This event provided a time for mentors to bond with their mentee’s family and share in the Christmas holiday spirit.

      The Winter Wonderland provides an opportunity for mentees and their family to come and enjoy presents, crafts, eat pizza and bond with their mentor outside of the typical after-school setting.

      Senior Campus Kids mentor, Stefanie Watson expressed, “Seeing their faces light up for the simple activities that we take for granted is rewarding.” Mentors and mentees took pictures together and decorated frames that the mentees took home,  a reminder of the fun memories they shared at Winter Wonderland.

   
CCASL would like to thank Gonzaga's BBT (Big Bing Theory) vocal club for their cheerful performance. For more information check out CCASL's mentoring programs and ways to get more involved!





   

Monday, November 28, 2011

Justice in January- Cultivating Community Change

By: Angie Funnell 

    

        Based on the philosophy of the Center for Community Action and Service Learning’s Mission:Possible (M:P), CCASL is introducing a  new immersion program this upcoming January, called Justice in January. Justice In January provides a winter break immersion trip for Gonzaga University leaders and students where they can grow as individuals as they serve and give to others. Fostered in the Jesuit Philosophy of service, Justice in January strives to create awareness among student leaders of the significance of service in leadership with and for others. It is our goal that students involved will bring back to the Gonzaga campus an understanding of the lives of others far different from their own, which will draw us closer to comprehending both the possibilities and limitations of their own selves. 
    
     

       This January, three student leaders, nine participants, and staff advisor Luisa Gallagher will serve in Tacoma, Washington. The team will be living and working in the Hill-Top neighborhood. They will partner with the Guadalupe House, also known as the Tacoma Catholic Worker. While living in Jean’s House of Prayer, the team will be aiding the TCW in activities, working with homeless outreach, as well as working on a L’Arche Farm (with people with developmental disabilities). 
    
       
          
        Justice in January has three goals that are fostered around the Social Change Model of Leadership:         
  • That students will reflect and understand more about their personal values, beliefs and motives
  • To provide students with the opportunity of common purpose and to build collaborative relationships
  • To understand solidarity with the poor & explore how our lives can be lived on behalf of others 
(Left) Chelsea Hunt: Logistics Assistant, Nate Garberich, Lauren Mills, Connor Brenes, Luisa Gallagher: Faculty Advisor (Right)

          Service provides a powerful vehicle for developing student leadership capabilities in a collaborative environment. Under the Social Change Model, leadership is viewed as a process rather ran a position. The model emphasizes the need to understand self and others in an effort to effectively create community change. The model explicitly promotes the values of equity, social justice, self-knowledge, personal empowerment, collaborating, citizenship, and service. Under the umbrella of these values, the social change model provides students and student leaders the opportunity to examine within the levels of the individual, the group and the community/society. 
    
      
    The three student leaders are Seniors, Lauren Mills and Nate Garberich, and Junior Connor Brenes.

            Senior leader Nate Garberich said, “I like doing service because I find that it forces me to reflect on the reality of the human condition (basically we are all suffering in some way or another, and while that might sound quite negative, doing service further reminds me that humans are capable of coming together and transcending that suffering, turning it into something really powerful). I also like to serve because it humbles me and reminds me to be grateful for what I have. While service can be difficult (especially emotionally), I find that it is often super fun, giving me the chance to hear the stories of people who have had a completely different experience than I and also to hang out with peers.”

    Senior Lauren Mills as well noted, that “Service means being one with those people you serve.” Lauren said, “It doesn’t make me a better person to do these things, it just means I can learn from those around me and the opportunity that service gives me.” 

    

           Nate said, “In my opinion the mission of Justice in January is to bring together a group of students who hold a variety of different leadership roles to spend a week doing service and reflecting on leadership. Our hope is to structure the week around the Social Change Model, which looks at the individual, the community, and the society as a whole. We hope participants will walk away more aware of their leadership style, more confident that they can ignite social change, and better able to work with other different leaders when back on campus.”

    

           The Justice in January program will have the privilege to grow, learn, and initiate change in themselves and in the society that they are serving.

    The RED Ribbon

        
    30 years after the first cases of HIV – the red ribbon is the universal symbol of awareness and support for those living with HIV. The red ribbon was the first ever ribbon symbol, inspiring later versions such as the pink ribbon for breast cancer awareness.     

    On December 1, 2011 CCASL will be celebrating World AIDS Day. An AIDS resource table will be set up between 9am and 11:30am,  in the main lobby of the Crosby Student Center. The afternoon will conclude with a presentation from noon to 1pm. 

    The World AIDS Day campaign this year is focusing their efforts on "Getting to Zero": Zero New HIV Infections, Zero Discrimination and Zero AIDS Related Deaths. 

    Be aware and knowledgeable about HIV and AIDS. The discussion will be facilitated by a power point about AIDS service learning and service work. There will as well be a presentation from FaceAIDS abut the local AIDS community and some of their global efforts. 

    ACT UP and raise awareness and support through the facebook page or follow the streaming tweets! Get involved and learn more: http://www.worldaidscampaign.org/. For more information contact Kierra Irvin at ws-kirvin@gonzaga.edu or 509-303-6446.

    Thursday, November 10, 2011

    Former GU Alumna recieves presitigous Award of Service at the White House

    By: Angie Funnell     

          Former Gonzaga alumna of ’06, Meagan (Brncick) Terry recently was awarded The National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award by the White House last Wednesday. Meagan pursued a Bachelor of the Arts in Public Relations and minor in sociology, as well as participated in the Gonzaga-In-Florence program for a year. 
        
          Meagan began her life-long embarkment of service in her undergrad years at Gonzaga through CCASL (Center for Community Action and Service Learning). Meagan was a mentor with the Shaw Connections Mentoring Program for two years, then became the Student Coordinator of the Program. Meagan found community and fellowship with the myriad of other Gonzaga students who participated in the mentoring program. The program is fostered on creating an environment for the kids to feel amazing and loved in the several hours spent with the mentors.

         Meagan explains, “The work that we do, on a personal side is almost selfish, because its so rewarding- beyond the paycheck. To be able to see a child's life change, be the first to go on and graduate from high school and and continue towards college is amazing.” Meagan spoke of the self-sacrifice you make...“Though the hours aren’t typical, to be able to know that you are making a difference in one person’s life has a ripple effect on everyone that they encounter and influence.”

         Meagan now works with the non-profit, PlatteForum in downtown Denver, CO. PlatteForum is an artist residency organization which provides the space and nurture that artists need to create a new body of work while they are staying in town. Artists travel from all over the United States and abroad. The program is especially unique because Meagan and her team bring in youth from the streets who are denied the opportunity to the arts. The youth are encouraged to know that they can achieve in life, more than traditional environments allow them to. On the flip side, the artists are as well rewarded by the humbling experience of teaching the students how to inspire and produce creativity. 

          ArtLab, has an internship program for high school students. There are 15 students that work alongside professional local artists every Saturday, and are rewarded financially by the hour. This opportunity allows the students to enhance their critical thinking skills. They have the opportunity to write an original play/or score, to perform it, and create murals around the city. ArtLab and PlatterForum provides students the chance to express their individuality, in a nurturing encouraging and loving environment.

        PlatteForum was one of eleven programs to be awarded the National Arts and Humanities Award at the White House in Washington, DC. Meagan expressed gratitude for how Michele Obama welcomed them with open arms. The experience was humbling and life-changing, especially for the student Meagan brought along. This student had never bought a tie before, never stayed in a hotel before, and never been on a plane before. He experienced a lot of 'firsts,' but his spirit is tenacious and deserves opportunity for success.

         Meagan's advice for those entering into service is to learn from the life experiences working with people from different backgrounds... Get to know their story. Meagan is an embodiment of the Gonzaga and Jesuit, humanistic philosophy... 'to be the men and women for others"...

    Wednesday, October 26, 2011

    Be "the men and women for others"...

    By: Angie Funnell 
       
          CCASL’s mission is to develop student leaders with an ethic of service and a life-long thirst for social justice. Through values of community, hearth, justice, respect, transformation and creativity, CCASL provides the opportunity for students at Gonzaga to embark on the Jesuit philosophy of being “the men and women for others.” This is a philosophy that student leader, Alex Power has embarked on. 

         Alex Power is a Senior Business Administrations major, with concentrations in Marketing and HR Management. Alex has done a variety of service with CCASL since his freshman year at Gonzaga, from mentoring programs to co-curricular programs! Alex was a Campus Kids mentor in his freshman and sophomore year, and Smile Coordinator his sophomore and junior year. He participated in Reality Camp entering into his freshman year, and joined the staff as a Coordinator during his sophomore, junior and senior year! Alex was also a participant on Mission Possible (M:P) during his freshman and sophomore year. He most recently led a team on M:P as a Coordinator in his junior year and will again this spring as a senior!

        Alex says, “I started doing service in my sophomore year in high school. I have such a privileged life and we take for granted what we have some times. People don’t realize the personal reward that they can gain from doing service.” Alex has pursued the Coordinator role with many of CCASL’s programs because he wants to make sure that the other mentors have the same incredible, heart-rending, and eye opening experiences he has had.

        Serving through CCASL’s mentoring program Smile, Alex loved spending the simplest hour with kids. All it takes is an hour of your weekly schedule to inspire, influence, encourage happiness in a child’s life! Serving through Campus Kids, Alex loved the act of mentoring a child, and watching their growth over the years. Reality Camp offers 40 freshman the opportunity to witness a different side of Spokane that many residents aren’t able to experience. Mission Possible (M:P) is an encouraging spring break alternative because it “forces you out of your comfort zone and you have the ability to experience sides of people’s lives that you typically never are able to see,” said Alex.

        Told through Alex's perspective: “During Mission:Possible freshman year, I was working in a clothing bank in downtown Portland and this man named Miguel entered. Every man that entered was allowed to take two shirts, long sleeve shirt, jacket, sweatshirt, socks, hats, and trade shoes. Miguel asked me if I had any more long underwear, but unfortunately I had just given the last pair away. Miguel continued to walk around the room and returned with a pair of socks and said he was done. I looked at him and offered to help him find more clothes to fill up his bag. Miguel looked at me with a smile and said ‘this is all I need, other people will need this stuff.’”



        For Alex, “service is what I want to do with my life- to serve.” After graduation, Alex is applying to the JVC. He’d love to do two years of service in the South or New England. He would love to engage in something that he has never done before, such as working with homeless teams or work with ex-convicts. In high school, he did a lot of homeless outreach. Alex wishes that more students would volunteer with the CCASL programs. He’s said, “You end up gaining more than you give.” 



    Follow CCASL on twitter GonzagaCCASL or check our Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/CCASL

    Tuesday, October 18, 2011

    Campus Kids Mentoring

    By: Angie Funnell 

    CCASL's mentoring program Campus Kids had their first Saturday Activity at Greenbluff farms! Approximately 100 GU student leaders, staff and meetees enjoyed a delightful day filled with activities inlcuding a pumpkin patch, petting zoo, hay maze, and even a "Pubkin Chunkin," where a pumpkin is shot out of a canon! Mentees came from five participating elementary schools, which include Logan, Bemiss, Longfellow, Garfield, and Stevens.

    A student leader, Brianne Byers is a senior Business major at Gonzaga University and a CCASL student mentor through Campus Kids. Bri has always had a love for children and been a babysitter and nanny throughout her years of high school. Spending time with kids is a reminder of what is important to her in life- relationships.

    Brianne has been a part of campus kids through CCASL since her freshman year. Bri has had the privilege to work with the same family the entire time. The relationship Bri has built with this family is very special and unique, because she was first able to work with her current mentee's older sister. Brianne has developed a beautiful, encouraging friendship with her mentee. Even when she studied abroad in Florence, Italy she was still able to keep up with her regular Tuesday activities with her mentee through skype! 

    She said, "I think service gives us as students about the bigger picture in life. It shows us how giving back can directly affect people even when you might not directly notice it.  Service is a way for students to escape the simplicity of our lives and learn about someone else, focus the obsessive amount of attention we put on our schooling and bettering ourselves by helping others."

    Brianne admires the soul purpose Campus Kids upholds, which is to help kids. She's said, "I believe after helping to raise my younger sister that kids have the most impact on the world and if they are not given a proper example they aren't going to understand what it means to be a leader. I love the mentality of Campus Kids and all of the staff which constantly encourages and supports students during their experience working with the elementary school students." 

    To become a Student Mentor please contact Bailley Wootton at 509-313-6821 or wootton@gonzaga.edu or visit the website at Campus Kids. 

    Spring Break Spokane - Moved to March 2013

    After careful consideration, the Center for Community Action and Service Learning has decided to postpone the annual Spring Break Spokane for next March 2013 This decision comes from student feedback and a desire to do a more in depth work in our community in line with what is taking place during mission possible. We appreciate all the support and service of our volunteers from Spring Break Spokane and thank you for your patience as we seek to improve this program for Gonzaga’s students and the Spokane community.

    We are considering revamping the program to focus on the area of refugees and immigrants in the Spokane area and will continue the program in March 2013. If you are interested in joining a focus group or being a part of student leadership for 2013, please contact Luisa Gallagher at gallagher@gonzaga.edu.


    Follow CCASL on twitter GonzagaCCASL or check our Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/CCASL

    Friday, October 14, 2011

    For Gonzaga University students Community action and service learning introduce Jesuit values for service, justic

    By Mary Hazuka: Gonzaga Student writer for The Fig Tree

    Gonzaga University's Center for Community Action and Service Learning (CCASL) plant seeds of the Jesuit identity of service and justice . 

    Gonzaga CCASL

    As CCASL helps students be involved in the community through service-action programs, it transforms them to become active participants in their communities after graduation. 

    “A high number of graduates go on to serve in the Peace Corps, Jesuit Volunteer Corps and Teach for America. Service is a pathway for students to become dynamic members of their communities for their whole lives,” said Sima Thorpe, assistant dean of students and founder and director at CCASL, which now has 32 programs, eight of which are mentoring programs.

    “It is the realization of a long-term dream to see how the program has progressed. About 2,800 students annually are involved in  service,” she said. “There are  service-learning classes in almost every department with 90 faculty involved and 1,500 students participating in more than 30 classes each semester.”

    CCASL provides different programs to attract students to service related to their interests and studies.

    Todd Dunfield, the associate director of CCASL, started  as a mentor with Campus Kids, one of the first mentoring programs. Since graduating from Gonzaga University in 2000, he has helped the program grow, serving through AmeriCorps from 2000 to 2001.

    He attributes the success of GU mentoring programs to the many students who return every year. “They come back to  mentoring programs, such as Campus Kids. About 45 percent of student mentors are sophomores.  We don’t  recruit freshman until late spring,” Todd said.

    Campus Kids mentoring after school on campus has helped at-risk children in fourth through sixth grades succeed in academics and relationship building for 15 years. Many mentors work with the same student for several years.

    “Students are great role models for at-risk children. There are positive learning outcomes for both the children and the student mentors,” Sima said.

    Senior Lindsey Friessnig, who has participated for three years, said, “It’s a way for me to integrate service into my Gonzaga routine. By spending a few hours a week with my fellow mentors and mentees, it has demonstrated how easy it is to take a step back from life in college and to do something for others. It has also been an opportunity to learn about social justice issues that impact our schools and communities.”

    Student teams do homework and educational games together. One Saturday a month, students and mentees do activites, such as trips to a skating rink or apple picking at Green Bluff.

    “Three years ago, I met my bouncy, bright-eyed mentee and had no idea what to expect,” Lindsey said.  She has found consistency crucial: “Always being there when I say I will is a little act that goes a long way and establishes trust,” she said.

    Other mentoring programs offered are Student Mentoring in Life and Education (SMILE), building self-esteem; Earthbound, teaching sustainability, and Zag Study Buddies, doing tutoring and academic mentoring.

    Another popular program is Mission:Possible, a service-immersion program that sends students during spring break across the country for a week of community service and mission to such cities as Portland, Ore., Denver, Colo., Tacoma, Wash., and  San Francisco, Calif. 

    Student leaders and a faculty member run Mission:Possible. The small group setting supports bonding, and trips introduce the four pillars of the Jesuit Volunteer Corps—simplicity, spirituality, service and community. 

    CCASL also offers an Spring Break Spokane, in which students serve in the local area, reaching out to those in their backyard to address issues of this community.

    Todd said student slots for Mission:Possible filled up within four hours this past year.

    Many students do Mission: Possible three or four times, he said. Based on feedback, CASSL finds that the most impact is from immersion trips.

    For example, the pre-orientation Reality Camp draws 40 incoming freshman to campus early for a night and day of service at the House of Charity, a night on campus, one in the woods and the last night on campus, so they are immersed in Spokane and come to know their neighbors, he said.
    Reality Camp also emphasizes the Jesuit pillars.

    A student who participated in the Way of the Heart retreat and Special Olympics wanted to connect students year round  with people with developmental disablities. The student started CCASL's program, Gonzaga University Specialized Recreation, which has more than 50 volunteers. It does sports and puts on plays to raise funds for local people with developmental disabilities. It wants students and local people of diverse backgrounds, abilities and ages to feel welcome, respected and loved.

    CCASL supports social justice educational programs through Just Desserts, a dessert with a forum and speakers discussing current justice issues such as human trafficking. Students learn ways to help homeless or hungry people, or fight AIDS through local organizations.

    Sima Thorpe
    Todd Dunfield and Sima Thorpe
    “Service requires people. Students and staff lead the programs, working with 150 community partners and  volunteers. CCASL is run 50 percent by grants, donations and fund raising, and the university underwrites the rest,” said Sima, who is fulfilled by sharing her commitment to social justice.
    Growing up in a Middle-Eastern-American household, she experienced and learned about injustice at an early age. She learned from her parents, who were teachers, to work for justice.

    “My father, an Iranian immigrant, met and married my mother at the University of Oregon.  During the Iran-Iraq war, most of my family in Baghdad, Iraq, became refugees and moved into our home in Eugene,” said Sima. She went to the University of Oregon because it had one of the first service learning programs. Throughout college she worked with homeless, hungry and poor people, going into their homes. After graduating in 1985, she taught poor and low-income children, including at the Coeur d’Alene Indian Reservation.  She was an advocacy paralegal from 1988 to 1994. 

    Todd came to Gonzaga from Texas, seeking a school with a culture driven by social justice and service.

    Going often to daily Mass with his family, he learned about care of the poor.  He majored in history with plans to teach, but went on to earn a master's degree in student affairs in 2004 at Seattle University before returning to Spokane to work at CCASL.

    Sunday, October 9, 2011

    Mission:Possible (M:P) Sign Ups!

    CCASL's Mission:Possible service trip takes over one hundred student, faculty and staff to 10 different location sites across the US from Missisippi to Montana.  We are very excited about the interest in the Mission:Possible program this year! 

    The women’s portion of mission:possible filled up within the first 13 minutes! Fortunately, we still have spaces available therefore freeing up some of the students on the waiting list to participate. We will inform the students on the waiting list by Monday October 10th.  Our first Mission:Possible logistics meeting will be October 17th at 9pm. 


    For more information please contact: Luisa Gallagher at gallagher@gonzaga.edu

    Friday, September 30, 2011

    Service Fest & Post Grad Fair!

    By: Angie Funnell

    Twice each year, CCASL’s Service-Learning Office organizes a service fair for Gonzaga students, staff and faculty interested in becoming more involve with the local community. Nearly 120 non-profits are invited to campus to share more about their volunteer opportunities bringing awareness about their specific cause to student. Agencies represented offer opportunities to work with women, children, the homeless, senior citizens, or to help with advocacy in environmental and social justice. There are a myriad of student run mentoring programs, hospice and post grad programs represented such as the Peace Corps International, Jesuit Volunteer Corps, Teach4America and more. 

    A senior leader, Katy Close, is the new campus kitchens intern for the 2011-2012 academic year. Katy has been involved with CCASL since her freshman year when she started volunteering with the campus kitchens community dinners every week. As the campus kitchens intern, Katy coordinates volunteers for the Thursday night community dinners as well as is a pivotal resource for the leadership team and students. Campus Kitchen’s is a unique organization that seeks the injustice in the unacceptable amount of food wasted in our society. One of 25 branches nationwide, CKGU takes food from many sources, such as the COG and Second Harvest Food Bank, to provide nutritional and delicious meals for those in need in the Spokane community.

    Get involved: http://www.gonzaga.edu/student-life/Get-Involved/Community-Action-and-Service-Learning/CCASL-programs/Campus-Kitchens.asp

    From Katy’s perspective, she’s said, “Service is important because not only does it benefit people within a given community but it also encourages growth, learning and purpose for the server. Service causes all people involved to learn and grow in a way that other involvement or engagement cannot offer.  As Gonzaga students, we are a privileged and able group of people who have no reason to not be involved with the betterment of the Spokane community.”
     

    Campus Kitchen’s was one of the many non-profit organizations that attended the Service Fest in Cataldo Hall, on Wednesday September 21st, 2011. Katy has said, the “service festival is always an encouraging experience. It's amazing how many different organizations show up and how many opportunities students have to be involved in their community.” 

    For more information about getting involved with service-learning opportunities please contact Molly Ayers at (509) 313-6487 or ayers@gonzaga.edu.

    Wednesday, September 28, 2011

    Goodbye Bridget . . .



    By Emily Paulson

    I have spent the last two plus years sharing an office with Bridget Desantis.  She held the position of AmeriCorp Vista with the Campus Kitchen here at CCASL.  During her reign with CKGU, she not only came up with the idea of an on-campus community garden, she saw her dream to fruition.  Bridget has worked tirelessly on the garden, the Campus Kitchen Community Dinner and a host of other service projects.

    I was really excited to work with Bridget when she started.  Mostly because she was a rugby player and I was convinced that I could get her to join the roller derby with me.  It took a while for us to bond.  She was very shy and quiet, but I soon realized that she was a powerhouse.  Bridget was always the first person to lend a hand to a co-worker whether it is help programmatically, or a ride to the airport, or pet sitting.  She was always there.
    In the spring of 2010, Bridget and another Vista invited Molly Ayers and me to a secret meeting at Starbucks.  There, they shared their plan to build a small community garden behind CCASL.  We informed them that this was not the first garden proposal to go to the university and none had been approved.  Regardless of this, they sent me up to ask Todd Dunfield if we could go ahead with the project.  He was supportive and helped Bridget and Kristina write a comprehensive proposal that was eventually approved by the President of the University.  The Ruellen-Day Community Garden that stands behind CCASL II and the Honors House is the brainchild and legacy of Bridget Desantis.  The garden is currently supplanting the meals that the Campus Kitchen sends out to the Spokane community.

    And so it is with a heavy heart that we send Bridget off to the next chapter in her life.  I am happy to have had the pleasure to work with her and blessed to be able to call her my friend.  

    Campus Kids at Gonzaga University!

    With the new school year already underway, Gonzaga student mentors are pumped up once again to bring some “Zag Spirit” to kids in the Spokane community! More than 80 Gonzaga students have committed their time and energy to helping children who are at risk for academic failure, providing them with the opportunity to grow, both intellectually and socially. In preparation for Campus Kids, Zag students have participated in training sessions with coaches from the Youth Programming Quality Initiative on September 11th. 
    Campus Kids brings student mentees from five different elementary schools, (Longfellow, Logan, Stevens, Garfield, and Bemiss). Mentees have the opportunity to come to campus to spend time with their mentor while working on homework, playing games, and sharing a healthy snack. Zag student visit their mentees once a month during school as well as attend Saturday excursions together, such as ice skating, Cat Tales, and a Winter Wonderland party. On October 8th, there will be a visit to Greenbluff farms for pumpkin picking and caramel apple crunching! The time that Zag students  and mentees spend together is extremely valuable, allowing them to create a vision for their future. Campus Kids has a promising year ahead, and all the participants are excited to get started!

    Thursday, September 15, 2011

    KPMG Community Matters

    September 10, 2011 – By Shannon Henry



    This past weekend on Saturday, September 10th, KPMG professionals and accounting students from Gonzaga University came together to give back to the community at Vinegar Flats. The idea for the Community Matters event came from Paul Bracich, a partner at KPMG who also serves on the Gonzaga University Board of Trustees. For the past six years, the summer interns from Gonzaga at KPMG take on the task of planning the event, which invites 50 accounting students to join 15 KPMG professionals at Vinegar Flats Garden.

    As it has been in the past, this year’s event was a huge success. The volunteers spent the morning and into the afternoon serving in many different capacities at the site. Groups rotated through various tasks such as planting, weeding, watering, digging trenches, and setting up for a dinner fundraiser event to take place that evening. To take a break from the physical labor of the day, groups got to do arts and crafts and play with the children of the women from the shelter. Overall, the event was so much fun for everyone.

    This event was a great opportunity for students to meet and network with professionals in a relaxed environment. The common interest of dedication to service at Gonzaga and KPMG is what truly brought people together for the event. With the help of CCASL, the event ran smoothly and we were able to make a huge difference at the site. Everyone who attended said they had a great time and are already looking forward to the annual service project next year!