RAM Students Cleaning Up Where You Drive
December 16, 2019
Fifteen students from FSC’s RAM Program have added adoption to their list of ways of giving back to the Long Island community. Not children or abandoned dogs and cats. Highways!
Adopt-a-Highway, to be precise. The volunteer effort is run through the program’s RAMdom Acts of Service project. It is the project’s fourth give-back adventure this year, including volunteering at soup kitchens, beach cleanups, and local fundraising walks. Students – joined by RAM program staff members – are currently cleaning a two-mile-long strip of highway shoulder, armed with garbage bags and “picker-uppers.” The students have committed to several months of clean-up.
Just as important, the students have added an environmental component to the project. They are picking through the trash, collecting plastic items for recycling. Each student carries one bag for plastics, and another for cardboard refuse. The remaining debris is collected by the Suffolk County Department of Public Works. In this way, the RAM students have gone way beyond a beautification effort.
“This highway cleanup is more than just a good deed,” says Dylan Gafarian, RAM academic counselor and participant in the clean-up effort. “It is also a valuable experience of serving others and the local community. RAM scholars are earning invaluable lessons in leadership, community outreach, and humanitarianism.”
RAM is a highly prestigious program in which students receive holistic advisement, research opportunities, and guided applied-learning experiences. It enrolls up to 250 students a year, and is funded by the U.S. Department of Education.