Reed Intermediate School Students Rally For A 'Future For Florida'
Reed Intermediate School Students Rally For A âFuture For Floridaâ
By Larissa Lytwyn
To New Englanders, the devastation of Hurricane Ivan and other storms in Florida this past summer seems like old news.
But to students at Brentwood Middle School in Pensacola, Fla., the memories are fresh.
âThe school was closed for month,â said Reed Intermediate School sixth grade teacher Karen Lane, a former Brentwood instructor.
Though Ms Lane moved to Connecticut four years ago, the native Floridian still keeps in close touch with her home state, particularly her old Brentwood community.
âSome of the students and their families didnât have electricity for six weeks or more after Hurricane Ivan,â Ms Lane said. âPeople who had their roofs torn off now have to secure it with tarp while they wait to get them rebuilt.â
Brentwood, she said, was an inner city school. Many of the studentsâ families cannot afford to finance the repair that needs to be done.
âWhen I heard from a friend about how awful it was there, I knew something had to be done,â Ms Lane asserted. âAnd the response of the students here at Reed has been positively overwhelming!â
Ms Laneâs students recently launched a âFuture for Floridaâ fundraiser.
âWhen the drive first started, the immediate response was unbelievable!â declared sixth grader Katie McMorran. âIt was wonderful to see.â
Many of the students, added fellow sixth grader Casey Rutter, had families and friends in Florida who had been badly affected by the hurricanes. âSome people really understood just how bad it was, and understood the need to help,â she said.
Leah Barrettâs relatives from West Palm Beach sent photographs of the devastation caused by Hurricanes Frances and Jeanne .
âIt was bad at West Palm, but even worse in Pensacola,â said Leah. âThat was hard to imagine, because West Palm was hit really bad, too.â
Leahâs friend Katie Canavan described the pictures in detail. âIt was awful,â she said. âThere were boats on lawns, and roofs completely torn up.â
âThere were also pictures of people fishing through garbage, looking for things they had lost,â added fellow sixth grader Gabrielle Milano. âIt was so terrible to see!â
For $1 or more, fund drive supporters can purchase student-made crafts, such as snowflake ornaments, snowflake-covered pencils, pins, and other accessories. The snowflake theme was a conscious one.
âFlorida kids are absolutely fascinated by snow,â said Ms Lane with a laugh. âWhen there is a light frost during the winter in Pensacola, you can see kids actually trying to shape the frost on their car windshield into little snowflakes.â She said she was excited, then, to âSend Snowflakes Southâ to the students.
Within the first few days of the drive, more than $300 had been collected.
Ms Laneâs students also wrote to area businesses seeking support.
Current raffle items include a $100 savings bond from Newtown Savings Bank, a complimentary eye exam from Eye Care Plus, a complimentary two-month membership at Curves for Women, two free weeks of martial arts training at United Studios of Self Defense, a free three-foot grinder from Newtown Deli, four box seats to a Yankees game, and porcelain figurines and ornaments.
âWeâll be sending out the money we collected in early January,â said Ms Lane. âWe thought that it would be a great way to kick off the New Year â a new start!â
For more information on the âFuture for Floridaâ fundraiser, or to donate, call 270-4880 or send items to Reed Intermediate School, 3 Trades Lane, Newtown CT 06470.