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Dress for Success
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Family Projects
"How wonderful it is that no one need wait a single moment to improve
the world."
--- Anne Frank
Over the years the Woodworth family has been engaged in numerous community service
projects and global humanitarian programs. Below are a few highlights from the
past.
Local Community Service
Hosting handicapped youth in our home and helping to operate the Utah Special
Olympics.
Neighborhood cleaning up yards and homes of the elderly.
Helping our neighbors organize and load/unload as they relocate. My boys and
I once calculated that we'd packed and moved over a hundred families through
the years.
Making sandwiches and preparing lunch boxes for the Food and Shelter Coalition.
Volunteering at various Church welfare farms to pick fruit (apples, peaches,
cherries, pears) to be crated for the needy.
Serving at the LDS Cannery to bottle the fruit for welfare contributions to
poor families.
Personal fast offering donations to help poor LDS members.
Our annual Sub-for-Santa family support.
Ongoing local service projects--building trails in the mountains, painting
trash cans in Hawaii, organizing fund-raisers for local groups like the Children's
Justice Center.
Jointly buying groceries for international student families, packing them
carefully and setting them on the porch, ringing the doorbell and running--a
real fun Woodworth tradition.
Global Humanitarian Projects
Our family typically attends several charity banquets/auction events each
year to donate products in helping Utah-based NGOs continue or expand their
international efforts.
Over ten years, five of us have raised money and paid our own way to Mali,
West Africa to spend two weeks a year doing volunteer village development projects
through the Ouelessebougou-Utah Alliance--schools, health care, microcredit,
etc.
Micah and Warner led a group of U.S. donors to a ten-day humanitarian service
project in Guatemala--building homes, doing square foot gardens, teaching English,
etc.
Erik and Warner spent a week doing volunteer work with victims of Hurricane
Mitch in Honduras, setting up village banks, volunteering at orphanages, doing
computer training, etc.
Kaye and Warner led an expedition of some 30 Utahns to Peru to carry out the
agenda of numerous village development efforts in the Sacred Valley of the Inca,
Peru--building a school, setting up a computer lab, and establishing a solar
heating system, village library, Lorena stoves, and building greenhouses for
family self-reliance.
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