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YouthBuild Students Team with Red Sox at the Brockton Veterans Hospital |
![]() Quincy Housing Authority lead carpenter Paul Curran, Red Sox manager Terry Francona, YouthBuild student Ryan Serafini, worksite supervisor Nick Morganelli and student Matt Miller participated in Foundation Nation Community Service Day. |
On
a sunny August day Quincy YouthBuild students Matt Miller and Ryan Serafini
joined with students from four other Boston Coalition YouthBuild in helping
volunteers from the Red Sox Foundation, corporate sponsor Covidien and local
building tradesmen update Miller says it was by far the best day of his life. He got to use skills he learned in the program and meet some of his favorite Red Sox players. With Miller were YouthBuild Worksite Supervisor Nick Morganelli, Quincy Housing Authority Lead Carpenter Paul Curran, as well as TRA site manager Isabel Cobb, staff members Darcy Cordner, and Annette Owens and Miller’s mother, Debbie. “Saturday's
event was very rewarding. It was a privilege to take part along with the Red
Sox Foundation and the Covidien volunteers. Everyone was energetic about
helping the veterans and the current troops. It was a thrill of a lifetime to
be part of such a wonderful event and very exciting to meet the Red Sox
players,” said Cobb. Some of the projects accomplished during the 6-hour event were: painting several interior and exterior doors; cleaning the patio and spreading gravel; cleaning pool area walls and heat grates; removing pool balcony theater seats to allow more storage; cleaning and painting the storage area; assembling and installing basketball court storage cages and painting cabinets; and replacing locker room storage cabinets. On
the baseball field and the surrounding courtyard, work included: planting shade
trees by the field; leveling the pitcher’s mound; applying chicken grit to the
field; installing a new home plate; water sealing and placing picnic tables;
removing weeds; and applying mulch around the courtyard perimeter. Meanwhile other volunteers assembled care packages for soldiers overseas. In
addition, as part of their program, the students had come to the hospital three
times before the event to work on the building. “One
of the nicest things was how the veterans were impressed with and very
appreciative of what the boys had done,” Cordner said. |

