Teenagers Volunteer in Droves for Katrina Relief
Teenagers from around the United States are among the many volunteers who have offered their time and energy for post-Katrina relief efforts in the Gulf Coast states.
Young people have enthusiastically lined up for a variety of volunteer jobs; from building houses for Habitat for Humanity to acting as intake personnel, gathering information to assess the needs of individuals displaced by the hurricane and the subsequent flooding, teenagers are working alongside their adult counterparts to make a difference in the devastated region.
Some teenagers offer to visit housebound individuals still in temporary housing, while others care for animals rescued in the aftermath of the storm. Still others have succeeded in raising thousands of dollars in their local communities for Katrina relief. Many college students, rather than heading for Daytona or Cancun on their spring break, found themselves drawn to the Gulf Coast.
One student remarked that "It's amazing how little some of these people really have. I mean, they've lost everything." She was busy helping an elderly woman fill out an application for assistance. She was due to return to her college at the end of the week - undoubtedly with an altered perspective on the world.
From comforting displaced Gulf Coast residents to cleaning out once-flooded houses to using their computer skills to input data for volunteer agencies, these young people are making a difference - and learning some valuable life lessons in the process.
Young people have enthusiastically lined up for a variety of volunteer jobs; from building houses for Habitat for Humanity to acting as intake personnel, gathering information to assess the needs of individuals displaced by the hurricane and the subsequent flooding, teenagers are working alongside their adult counterparts to make a difference in the devastated region.
Some teenagers offer to visit housebound individuals still in temporary housing, while others care for animals rescued in the aftermath of the storm. Still others have succeeded in raising thousands of dollars in their local communities for Katrina relief. Many college students, rather than heading for Daytona or Cancun on their spring break, found themselves drawn to the Gulf Coast.
One student remarked that "It's amazing how little some of these people really have. I mean, they've lost everything." She was busy helping an elderly woman fill out an application for assistance. She was due to return to her college at the end of the week - undoubtedly with an altered perspective on the world.
From comforting displaced Gulf Coast residents to cleaning out once-flooded houses to using their computer skills to input data for volunteer agencies, these young people are making a difference - and learning some valuable life lessons in the process.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Fraudsters Stole $1bn of Hurricane Katrina Relief Cash, Congress Told
- Katrina Relief Contracts Come Under Investigation
- Katrina Katrina - The Fix is Out
- Thanks to Katrina Evacuees, Houston’s Homicide Rate Increases
- Uncivilized Beasts and Shameless Hellions
- Hurricane Katrina Devastation Tours Selling Out Like Beignets
- Louis Farrakahn Says Government Conspiracy Flooded New Orleans
- Rich and Famous Also Affected By Hurricane Katrina
- Gulf Coast Still Hurting Two Years Later
- FEMA Knew of Toxic Trailers for Over a Year, Didn’t Tell Residents
- Church Gives House to Katrina Victims, Who Then Sell It and Leave
- What have been the most significant environmental impacts of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans?
- As Thousands of Gulf Coast Residents Left, Hispanics Moved In
- Free Gulliver: Six Swift Lessons in Life Planning
- Did Katrina Free Firing Flippers?
- Snooty Ocala Subdivision Outlaws Hurricane Katrina Evacuees
- The Deadly History of Hurricanes and Lessons That Must Be Learned
- Inviting Hurricane Evacuees Into Your Home May Prove Risky
- No Surprise: FEMA Chief Brown Couldn’t Even Oversee Horse Shows
- Stars Benefit Hurricane Katrina




