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Pitt volunteers in yellow shirts working together
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There鈥檚 no stopping Pitt volunteers

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  • Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

During this year鈥檚 National Volunteer Week (April 18-24), the staff at is coordinating activities to keep the Pitt community busy.

And even throughout the pandemic, Pitt Serves Assistant Director Shenay Jeffrey said there has been an enthusiastic turnout of student volunteers. Popular projects have ranged from assisting at food banks to virtually tutoring 黑料吃瓜网 Public School students at the United Way Learning Hubs. Some 1,500 students participated in last October鈥檚 .

Senior Eric Chiu, a health and rehabilitation sciences major, likes to volunteer at 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 urban farms. He created dried soup packets at Manchester鈥檚 Growing Together Farm and cleared land and built planting beds at farms in the East Liberty, Hazelwood and Mt. Oliver neighborhoods. Through , Chiu helped plant hundreds of trees along the North Shore and directly in front of Heinz Field.

鈥淭here鈥檚 something uniquely rewarding about volunteering in a hands-on labor-intensive project like gardening,鈥 said Chiu. 鈥淲hen the project is finished, you can always sense a feeling of accomplishment and optimism in the group which is an amazing experience.鈥

Join in!

Pitt鈥檚 Office of Community and Governmental Relations has taking place this week, including crafting no-sew blanks for children in the hospital, making phone calls with Vaccinate PA and special Earth Day activities. They鈥檒l also be sharing profiles of Pitt people in action.

For even more, visit Pitt Serves鈥 and .

Junior Samantha Huynh, another health and rehab major, also prefers the outdoors and enjoys helping Friends of Southside Parks. Her favorite part? 鈥淭o connect quickly with a stranger who is also passionate about serving.鈥

Another popular activity for students throughout the pandemic was tutoring鈥攁ssisting students from the Northside, Hazelwood, Homewood and other neighborhoods with math, science and other subjects. Through that work, Jeffrey noted the students were able to see firsthand how direct volunteering may even impact policy. For example, the students were able to see just how many households in some neighborhoods lacked internet access.

鈥淥ur student volunteers could learn and grow right alongside the community and see the resilience and strength of the people,鈥 she said. Jeffrey said volunteering during a public health crisis says a lot about how humans respond to one another. 鈥淭he pandemic heightened what was already there,鈥 she said.

Faculty and staff contributions

More than 800 Pitt faculty and staff members began calling last spring to participate in the , an institution-wide effort to fill the gaps of unmet needs.

Alex Toner, assistant director of community engagement in the Office of Community and Governmental Relations, said volunteers stepped up to take part in more than 30 opportunities.

鈥淭hey leveraged big hearts and broad expertise,鈥 he said.

Toner said the pandemic has reminded the Pitt community of how important service is to our mission. 鈥淚t鈥檚 highlighted how necessary it is to strengthen and deepen our commitment to working with community partners to address challenges that simply won鈥檛 go away when everyone is vaccinated,鈥 he said.

In fact, Toner thinks even more Pitt staff and faculty volunteers will be needed after the pandemic ends. He encourages the Pitt community to subscribe to the 聽and to continue to take part in a 鈥渃ulture of service across the Pitt campus.鈥

Just some of the faculty and staff efforts:

  • An initiative called , in which Pitt donated 599 laptops and funding to help provide families with tech devices.
  • A full-time for the region which offered free assistance and was staffed by 30 volunteers.
  • Work by Community Engagement Fellows and students from the School of Social Work who fanned out across Homewood, and help with remote learning.
  • Helping distribute some 6,000 pounds of food across six sites in Allegheny County last fall.