Maybe AC can do something like this????
Posted: Sun Nov 30, 2008 3:10 pm
Residents gather to clean up community
By LANZ CHRISTIAN BAñES/Times-Herald staff writer
Posted: 11/23/2008 07:51:27 AM PST
Diane and Richard Mond pick up trash Saturday on the corner of Griffin and Taper streets in Vallejo's Country Club Crest. The two came as part of the Church on the Hill, one of several organizations who came together to help clean the Crest, sponsored primarily by Fighting Back Partnership. (Lanz Christian Bañes/Times-Herald) Community members and several organizations cleaned up 12 Dumpsters worth of junk from the Country Club Crest neighborhood Saturday.
"Overall, I can't say anything bad. It's been a really good day," said John Allen, project director for Fighting Back Partnership.
The effort, attended by an estimated 100 to 125 people, was the second such event sponsored by Fighting Back Partnership and Vallejo's Code Enforcement Division and joined by House of Acts, the Bay Area Services Network alumni association and members of the Church on the Hill.
"I feel great," said Mark Little, 19, and a member of the Church on the Hill.
Little said he was inspired by God to help clean up the Crest.
The Crest cleanup coincided with Fighting Back and Code Enforcement's anti-graffiti effort throughout the city, in which Vallejo Mayor Osby Davis and Councilwoman Stephanie Gomes participated, said Tony Pearsall, executive director of Fighting Back Partnership.
Pearsall took 20 volunteers to paint over 20 different graffiti sites throughout northern Vallejo.
"This is a time when you have good out of bad," Pearsall said, referring to the city's bankruptcy.
Despite the poor economic situation, people still come together a as a community to clean their neighborhoods, Pearsall said.
Fighting Back has divided the Crest into quarters, each with its own cleanup day. The last event was in September, and the next is scheduled to be sometime in February or March, Allen said.
The final cleanup, tentatively scheduled for June or so next year, will be the largest and will include all four quarters, Allen said.
Fighting Back Partnership is a nonprofit neighborhood improvement organization. The group has been in 29 neighborhoods in its nearly 20-year history, Allen said.
The organization works with residents and provides them with resources so they can clean up and improve their neighborhoods - Fighting Back does not do the work for them, Allen said.
"We give them the tools and a systematic process whereby they can begin to regain control," Allen said.
Allen said the program, which Fighting Back has used since 1997, has been very successful, and the group has taught the process to others throughout the country.
"When we get done, things change," Allen said.
For more information, visit Fighting Back Partnership's Web site at http://www.fight-back.org.
• E-mail Lanz Christian Bañes at lbanes@thnewsnet.com or call 553-6833.
By LANZ CHRISTIAN BAñES/Times-Herald staff writer
Posted: 11/23/2008 07:51:27 AM PST
Diane and Richard Mond pick up trash Saturday on the corner of Griffin and Taper streets in Vallejo's Country Club Crest. The two came as part of the Church on the Hill, one of several organizations who came together to help clean the Crest, sponsored primarily by Fighting Back Partnership. (Lanz Christian Bañes/Times-Herald) Community members and several organizations cleaned up 12 Dumpsters worth of junk from the Country Club Crest neighborhood Saturday.
"Overall, I can't say anything bad. It's been a really good day," said John Allen, project director for Fighting Back Partnership.
The effort, attended by an estimated 100 to 125 people, was the second such event sponsored by Fighting Back Partnership and Vallejo's Code Enforcement Division and joined by House of Acts, the Bay Area Services Network alumni association and members of the Church on the Hill.
"I feel great," said Mark Little, 19, and a member of the Church on the Hill.
Little said he was inspired by God to help clean up the Crest.
The Crest cleanup coincided with Fighting Back and Code Enforcement's anti-graffiti effort throughout the city, in which Vallejo Mayor Osby Davis and Councilwoman Stephanie Gomes participated, said Tony Pearsall, executive director of Fighting Back Partnership.
Pearsall took 20 volunteers to paint over 20 different graffiti sites throughout northern Vallejo.
"This is a time when you have good out of bad," Pearsall said, referring to the city's bankruptcy.
Despite the poor economic situation, people still come together a as a community to clean their neighborhoods, Pearsall said.
Fighting Back has divided the Crest into quarters, each with its own cleanup day. The last event was in September, and the next is scheduled to be sometime in February or March, Allen said.
The final cleanup, tentatively scheduled for June or so next year, will be the largest and will include all four quarters, Allen said.
Fighting Back Partnership is a nonprofit neighborhood improvement organization. The group has been in 29 neighborhoods in its nearly 20-year history, Allen said.
The organization works with residents and provides them with resources so they can clean up and improve their neighborhoods - Fighting Back does not do the work for them, Allen said.
"We give them the tools and a systematic process whereby they can begin to regain control," Allen said.
Allen said the program, which Fighting Back has used since 1997, has been very successful, and the group has taught the process to others throughout the country.
"When we get done, things change," Allen said.
For more information, visit Fighting Back Partnership's Web site at http://www.fight-back.org.
• E-mail Lanz Christian Bañes at lbanes@thnewsnet.com or call 553-6833.