Volunteers build community as they work for change
March 13, 2017
Nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains, picturesque Asheville, North Carolina, is a frequent tourist destination known for its hospitality, arts, great restaurants and breweries. Consistently ranked as one of America’s best places to live, the growth of the 86,000-person community has also been accompanied by the challenges that face many other expanding cities, and Presbyterian Young Adult Volunteers (YAVs) are there to learn and help meet these needs.
Currently in its second year as an official YAV site, the partnerships that enable volunteer opportunities started several years ago when YAV alumna Sarah Robinson established Hands and Feet of Asheville in an effort to match up volunteers with opportunities in the community. Connections between Hands and Feet and the YAV program were formalized in 2015 and the location plugged into the recruitment and administration resources of the Presbyterian Mission Agency.
Four YAVs are in Asheville for the 2016-17 program year. Jeremy Glidden is working with Homeward Bound, an organization that assists people in moving from homelessness to more stable living situations. Briana Joseph is working with the Hillcrest Community Center after-school program, and also supervising field placements of students from UNC Asheville at the site. Sammie Smith is the volunteer coordinator for Habitat for Humanity in Asheville, and Andy Thomas works with the Asheville Poverty Initiative as the manager of 12 Baskets Café.
Sammie Smith, from Franklin, Ind., made the transition to Asheville following graduation from Indiana University with a bachelor’s degree in chemistry. A lifelong Presbyterian, she’s made application to several seminaries as a next step beyond the YAV program. Smith says mentors at Pyoca—an acronym for Presbyterian Youth Camp, located in Brownstown, Ind.—guided her to the YAV program. Her experience of working with volunteers at Habitat for Humanity has been eye-opening, helping to develop “people skills” she plans to use as she pursues further vocation in ministry.
“It’s been fun to see a really thriving nonprofit,” she says of the organization. “We just started our 300th house this month.
I get out to the construction site at least once a week. It’s cool to get out there and see the active construction site.”
Taking a brief break from his packed schedule of furniture delivery and moving, Jeremy Glidden also says PC(USA) mentors influenced his decision to explore the YAV program following graduation from Presbyterian-affiliated Grove City College. From the Finger Lake Region of Western New York, Glidden’s experience has influenced him to pursue the business and entrepreneurial aspects of nonprofit work.
In the first half of the program year Glidden had completed 65 move-ins, 87 donation pickups, nine moves of clients from one home to another and 37 furniture deliveries. But he loves the work, its challenges and the impact he’s making on peoples’ lives.
“Every day I encounter different problems that I have no idea [and] no one else has anything, necessarily, to add on how to fix it,” he says of working with Homeward Bound. “Being in a situation where I have to figure it out on the spot—all that problem solving—is the best at preparing me to be adaptable, by every day going into something that I’ll probably not have any idea how to do. But we have to figure it out…we have to move these people in.”
Andy Thomas is calmly instructing his volunteer servers at the 12 Baskets Café’ as the crowd of customers begins to gather prior to lunch. The free-meal café serves between 40 and 60 customers each day, and sometimes as many as 80, relying on donations of surplus food from area restaurants to meet the needs of the mainly low-income and homeless clientele.
A partnership with Kairos West, a ministry of All Souls Episcopal Cathedral in Asheville, the ministry’s goal is to “increase collaboration and decrease isolation.” Explaining his belief in abundance, as is indicated in the café’s name borrowed from the biblical parable in which loaves and fishes are multiplied and 12 baskets remain after everyone is fed— Thomas introduces the meal to guests. He says, “We live in a world that tells us there’s not enough to go around, and at 12 Baskets we believe that’s not true. We have an abundance of food… an abundance of people and an abundance of love.”
This is Thomas’ second year as a YAV, having spent the 2015-16 program year in Washington, D.C. He says there’s a difference in how each city approaches its homeless population and sees Asheville’s as a place where people “care more about trying to improve their community. There are more people willing to give of their time and their resources to help people who don’t have enough.”
On the other side of town, Briana Joseph, a graduate of UNC Asheville, leaves campus and arrives at the Hillcrest
Community Center after-school program. Situated in a subsidized housing development, the community center serves between 20 and 30 children each day. Joseph’s work, in partnership with eight students from UNC Asheville, provides mentors for the kindergarten through seventh grade participants.
The only non-Presbyterian YAV in Asheville this year, Joseph saw the work at the Hillcrest Enrichment Program as a natural fit. “Anyone who knows me, knows that I really love kids,” she says. “They’re precious and innocent, and they absorb everything around them… That was the part of this particular site that was most intriguing to me. I look for opportunities to be part of a child’s life and make a difference.”
Today she’s brought her violin. Once students are done with their studies and some outside playtime, she brings it out and introduces them to the instrument and plays a few songs. Students line up to take turns plucking notes and running the bow across the strings. Joseph’s patience and love for these eager learners comes through as they smile and laugh together.
Asheville’s YAV site coordinator is Selena Hilemon. She has been the executive director Hands and Feet of Asheville since 2015 and helped shepherd the existing organization’s volunteer opportunities into the YAV program.
“I still get to work with young adults and community partnerships, which is what I love to do,” she says of the group’s
alignment with the YAV program. “We have a lot of benefits in being part of a larger organization. Hitching our cart to the national office with their national presence, and having that much larger recruitment pool, gives us better exposure and grounding. It’s the difference between us existing and not existing.”
As he prepares to drive to pick up more donated furniture, Glidden reflects on how important the YAV program has been for his professional development. Rather than jumping into a career track following college, he feels aspects of being a volunteer—and working to help people— “allow me to do the best work I can, rather than trying to impress someone for a promotion or something like that. I get to do what I think is best to get the job done every single day, without worrying about being judged.”
Joseph agrees, noting the variety of opportunities each placement has for growth. “Through this program it is a safe space for me to branch out and try different things in the work world,” she says. “The YAV program has also challenged me to be comfortable with the unknown.
“Not everything has to be planned out.”
Gregg Brekke, Presbyterian News Service
Today’s Focus: Asheville Young Adult Volunteers
Let us join in prayer for:
Young Adult Volunteers 2016-17
Ainsley Herrick, Colombia
Brittany Beasley, Colombia
Rebecca Maria Maguire, Colombia
PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Donald Walker, BOP
Judy Walton, PILP
Let us pray:
Our loving Lord, we humbly return a portion of the bounty you have so generously given so that, through your Holy Spirit, these gifts may be multiplied and creatively used among our neighbors as you see fit. Amen.
Daily Readings
Morning Psalms 119:73-80; 145
First Reading Jeremiah 1:11-19
Second Reading Romans 1:1-15
Gospel Reading John 4:27-42
Evening Psalms 121; 6