Notre Dame Logo

Center for Social Concerns


 

Appalachia Seminar Sites

All sites except Nazareth Farm and Bethlehem Farm will leave Sunday and return late Friday so that you can attend both home football games. You will work a partial day on Friday and may not return until as late as midnight Friday night, so please keep that in mind as you plan your weekend. We will not negotiate any earlier returns or promise exact return times.

 

Education
David School (Grades 9–12, 70 students), David, KY
Sacred Heart Parish (Grades K–6, 34 students), Williamson, WV 

Environmental Stewardship

Appalachia—Science in the Public Interest (ASPI), Livingston, KY

Friends of the Blue Ridge Parkway, Fancy Gap, VA  
New River Gorge National Park, Glen Jean,WV

General service to community
Bethlehem Farm, Pence Springs, WV

Clearfork Community Institute, Clairfield, TN

Glenmary Farm, Vanceburg, KY

Rural Retreat, Rural Retreat, WV

Healthcare

Healthcare in Appalachia, Perry County, KY  NEW THIS SEMESTER!

Home repair and construction

Buchanan Neighbors United, Grundy, VA

Christian Appalachia Project (CAP), Eastern KY
Christian Outreach with Appalachian People (COAP), Harlan, KY
Hurley Community Development, Hurley, VA
McDowell Mission (now called The Community Crossing), Gary, WV

Nazareth Farm, Salem, WV

West Virginia Ministry of Advocacy and Workcamps, Gilbert, WV

Home repair and general service to community
Big Creek People in Action, Caretta, WV

Community District Outreach Ministries (CDOM), Charleston, WV

St. Joseph Housing Repair, Clintwood, VA (Not available for Spring 2010)

Legal Services (Second and third year law students)

Appalachian Research and Defense Fund of Kentucky (AppalReD)

 

Sites descriptions listed alphabetically:

Appalachian Research and Defense Fund of Kentucky (AppalReD)

The Appalachia Externship is a one credit academic externship. Students spend their fall break or spring break providing pro bono legal services at the Appalachian Research and Defense Fund of Kentucky (AppalReD), which is the federal and state-funded low income legal services provider for the Appalachian region of Kentucky. Students also participate in the Appalachia Seminar sponsored by the Center for Social Concerns, which involves several classroom sessions, reading assignments, and written assignments exploring the culture and social issues of the Appalachia region, as well as Catholic Social Teaching. Students who volunteered at AppalReD last spring were able to interview and counsel clients, draft documents, conduct legal research, and do court observation, among other activities.

This externship is being offered under the umbrella of the Appalachia Seminar sponsored by the Center for Social Concerns. Participating law students will be cross-registered in the Appalachia Seminar and will complete its requirements, which include several classroom sessions, reading assignments, and two written assignments exploring the culture and social issues of the Appalachia region, as well as Catholic Social Teaching. Law students will also receive additional professional responsibility and legal training to ensure they are prepared for the tasks at AppalReD. The externship will be open to six 2L and 3L students each semester. It will be graded Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory. The credit will be academic, NOT co-curricular. It will be offered at no cost to law students this fall. The Center for Social Concerns will provide a van for travel to AppalReD’s offices in Prestonsburg, Kentucky. AppalReD will provide lodging in a house next to their offices. The Law School will cover the cost of the van and food. Registration is now open on InsideND. Before registering, please visit the Appalachia Seminar web site to ensure that you understand the course requirements and that you will be available for the scheduled Wednesday evening classroom sessions, which begin on September 23rd. If you register for the Appalachia Externship, you will be automatically included in the Appalachia Seminar; you do NOT need to submit an application to the Center for Social Concerns or pay a fee. For more information contact Professor Bob Jones, Clinical Professor of Law and Director of the Notre Dame Legal Aid Clinic. Click on the following links for more information on the Appalachia Seminar and AppalReD.

Participants will not miss a home football game. They will drive to Appalachia the first Sunday of fall break and return the following Friday evening.

The Law School Student Spotlight: Rochelle Krebs '09 — Spring "Break" in Appalachia

Appalachia -Science in the Public Interest (ASPI)

ASPI's focus is to find solutions for increasing environmental problems through research and advocacy for public policies which favor the environment. ASPI's philosophy involves living simply in ways that are healthy for the earth and for ourselves.  While litter clean-up has been the main service component of this site in the past, students have also been involved in organic gardening, maintenance of the cordwood house and other buildings, and the promotion of a local recycling campaign. Students can anticipate getting down and dirty (literally) while engaging in their clean-up projects. Learning is emphasized, with students exploring the roots of environmental problems and thinking critically about current and possible solutions. In addition to learning about sustainable living and assisting in ASPI's projects, students will have the opportunity to eat dinner with local residents and attend social events such as bluegrass concerts and barn dances.  Students lodge in a facility that is separate from the work site where a kitchen with a refrigerator, oven, and range is available.  Showers are provided, and students buy and prepare most of their meals. Students bring their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).

Website: www.a-spi.org  Contact information

Bethlehem Farm

Bethlehem Farm was opened by Nazareth Farm volunteers and is organized around the four tenets of community, simplicity, prayer and service. Its mission is to provide volunteers a communal experience of Church, as a center of reflection and prayer, while working to promote social justice through the empowerment of the local community and volunteers. The students should expect to have a great and memorable week, but they do not need to be prepared for anything specific. They will work hard, but also relax and pray and just have a great time overall, engaged in service and community. Meals are provided. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).

Website: www.bethlehemfarm.net/   Contact Information

PLEASE NOTE: Students attending the Bethlehem Farm site will return in the late afternoon/evening of Saturday, October 24. You will not return in time to attend the home football game against Boston College.

Big Creek People in Action

Big Creek People In Action, Inc. (BCPIA) was founded in 1990 by citizens of McDowell County, West Virginia to address family, community and economic concerns in the area. Since that time, this nonprofit organization has been serving the community of McDowell County in the realms of early childhood development, education and literacy, leadership development, volunteer service, arts and culture, housing, recreation, and collaborative partnerships. Its mission is to “foster a community in which people learn, work, play, and grow together and prepare themselves for success in the 21st Century”. BCPIA's vision of McDowell County is one of empowered and self-sufficient people living in communities that are economically vibrant, democratic, and socially just. Immersion into the local community is important, and students will often work on projects alongside local families and those they are serving.  There are opportunities to attend services at a number of local churches of various denominations. Students buy food and prepare their own meals, and may want to bring one or two meals with them, as the local supermarket is closed on Sundays. www.bigcreekpeopleinaction.org  Student perspective on BCPIA  Contact information

Buchanan Neighbors United  

Buchanan County is nestled in the Appalachian mountains of far southwest Virginia. Its main industry is coal mining, which is steadily declining.  A steep unemployment rate is a daily struggle for its residents. Buchanan Neighbors United was born out of the need for community members to have a voice in their community by addressing the needs of its people. The neighbor organization accepts applications from those in the county who are in need of general housing repairs and improvements and then provides the materials and assistance to families on an urgency basis. Daily projects vary, and students will have the opportunity to do a variety of repair tasks at their work sites. BNU coordinators plan the week’s activities well, which in the past have included trips to local churches for gospel music performances, visits to local civic centers /services (i.e. fire department). Showers are available on most days.  Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets). Meals are provided. Contact information

Christian Appalachia Project (CAP)
CAP is a well-established, non-denominational volunteer organization with an organized and expansive core of long-term volunteers and paid staff. Its mission is to "help people help themselves" through education, economic opportunity, employment, and a sense of Christian community. Notre Dame and St. Marys's students have a long history of service-learning with CAP. Students participate in a structured program of work and prayer, and volunteer efforts are focused on home repair and construction. Students have the opportunity to attend diverse denominational church services throughout the week. Various sites in Kentucky. During the spring semester break, CAP hosts an event they call “Workfest” that includes students from colleges and universities throughout the country. Upon arrival, ND students will be teamed up with other students in addition to a ND team member. Meals are provided. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets). Website: www.christianapp.org/Student perspective on CAP   Contact information

Christian Outreach with Appalachian People (COAP)  

COAP is a non-profit, economical housing construction and repair organization that was incorporated in 1983 to provide safe, warm, and dry housing for low and very low income families in Harlan, Leslie, and Bell Counties.  The vision of COAP was created in 1977 with Mennonite volunteer Marlin Yoder’s dream of helping low income families reach their housing needs.  Since then, COAP has experienced tremendous growth. Under the leadership of Frank Stoffle, which began in 1992, COAP has completed many home repairs, room additions, new home construction, as well as water and septic upgrades for hundreds of families in Harlan County . COAP's ultimate goal is to help build a community in Harlan that meets the responsibility of caring for its itself.  Prior construction experience is helpful but not necessary.  Students buy food and prepare their own meals. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).   

Website: http://www.geocities.com/coaptestsite/volunteer.html  Contact information

Clearfork Community Institute (formerly Woodland Community Land Trust)  

The Clearfork Community Institute partners with the Woodland Community Land Trust, a community-initiated organization, whose mission is to purchase and hold lands for local residents who might otherwise be landless. This part of rural Appalachia has a majority of the land owned by out of state and out of country corporations. Through re-purchase of land, local residents have a secure base with which to begin holistic community development from a rural perspective. Students will have the opportunity to interact and build community with neighboring residents through visits to local churches and share meals with members of the community. Students buy food and prepare their own meals. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).

Website: www.woodlandcommunitylandtrust.org    Contact information

Community Development Outreach Ministry (CDOM)  

The CDOM is a division of the United Methodist Church that provides outreach ministries to the city of Charleston and surrounding rural areas. CDOM has two community centers—the Coal Branch and Avesta Drive Community Centers—in neighborhoods on the outskirts of Charleston. CDOM operates an after school program for children already in school and a summer day camp. These programs are for children in Kindergarten through 12th grade.  In the past students at CDOM have participated in home rehabilitation, listened to speakers on West Virginia welfare issues and Catholic Social Teaching, and visited a mountaintop removal site.  Showers are provided.  Students should bring a sleeping pad and pillow, and will buy food and prepare their own meals.

Website: www.gbgm-umc.org/wvcdom/   Contact information

David School  

The David School, founded by director Daniel Greene, has been recognized nationwide for its success with disadvantaged youth. Greene, a lay volunteer with the Catholic Church, started the school more than 20 years ago to serve students who have fallen through the cracks of public education. David School provides a second chance for these students by giving one-on-one attention, encouragement, and a strong sense of community.  Meals are provided. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).

Website: www.davidschool.org  Contact information

Friends of the Blue Ridge Parkway

Volunteers work with the FRIENDS of the Blue Ridge Parkway's Fisher Peak Chapter to preserve and protect the natural resources of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Students will work on trails, landscaping, and fencing. They will interact with local members of the community during meals and entertainment. The majority of the Parkway work will be done in and around the Blue Ridge Music Center. Nearby Galax, VA is the home of Old Time music. Students will have time to see performances, interact with the musicians, and participate in the local culture. Lodging will be in local homes. Food will be provided to the students who will prepare their own breakfast and mid-day meals. The FRIENDS will provide a prepared dinner meal. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets). Contact information

Glenmary Farm

Glenmary missioners maintain and provide leadership for a volunteer-based farm that covers 56 acres near the small town of Vanceburg, KY, in the Appalachian mountains. The program is a retreat-like immersion offering opportunities for prayer, sharing and reflection as a way to integrate service experiences into one’s faith life. Students will visit area churches of other faith traditions so volunteers experience the Glenmary commitment to ecumenism. The religious presence is everywhere felt and experienced for students at Glenmary. Students work primarily at four sites: a nursing home whose residents are elderly or disabled, a day care center for developmentally disabled adults an organization that builds homes and renovates substandard housing, and on site at Glenmary Farm.  Occasionally, students team up with other colleges during the break period.  Limited plumbing and central heating (one shower/student/week). In warm weather students can bring swimsuits for swimming, and participants may also want to bring some money (not more than $20) for social events such as concerts or shows.  Meals are provided and students help with preparation. As a side note, the farm's residents also include a cat and a dog who live outdoors on the farm. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).

Website: www.glenmary.org and for student perspective on Glenmary  Contact information

Healthcare in Appalachia  NEW THIS SEMESTER!

The “Healthcare in Appalachia” site draws on the expertise of healthcare professionals and administrators working in the Saint Joseph Healthcare System and the Appalachian Regional Healthcare System in eastern Kentucky. Students participating in this experience will follow doctors, nurses, and administrators through the daily challenges of serving the largely rural residents of Perry County, KY, where the 2007 poverty rate was 31.4%. Opportunities will vary, but should include observation of cardiac surgery; home visits with patients battling such challenges as a lack of running water and sanitation; and in-depth discussions with a variety of healthcare professionals about insurance, patient care, and healthcare reform as it relates to the people of Appalachia in most need of assistance. Students will stay in pairs with local hosts and may do significant travel to reach patients and professionals around the region. Meals will be supplied by host families or purchased during travel under the direction of the site supervisor. This site is new Fall 2009 and requires applicants to send a one-page essay describing their interest and relevant experience for selection to Deb Blasko at dblasko@nd.edu, in addition to completing the CSC application and registering through Inside ND by the deadline. Students interested in healthcare from all disciplines are welcome to apply. Contact information

Students should review relevant sites at:

Appalachia Regional Healthcare www.arh.org/Hazard/AHI/AHI.php

Appalachia Regional Healthcare www.arh.org/harlan/default.php

St. Joseph Healthcare System www.sjhlex.org/

Appalachian Regional Healthcare System www.apprhs.org/index.php

Hurley Community Development  

This small community has experienced many financial hardships and widespread unemployment due to the closing of a large number of coalmines. Mattie Christian and Edna Justus, the two coordinators of the site, have dedicated themselves to improving the spirit and living conditions of the community. Students will assist them in their efforts to complete community cleanup and building projects at various sites in the region, some relatively far from the community center to which the students will drive. Typical daily schedule includes a 7:30 wake up, prepare own breakfast and pack lunch, work from 9am-3pm at various work sites, free time at night or possible activity planned by the site. Students will interact with the residents and families at the work sites throughout the week and will attend a church service at one of the many churches in the area. The volunteers at the community center are amazing and inspirational people with whom to talk and work alongside. Students should bring sheets and blankets, not sleeping bags; and will buy food and prepare their own meals.   Contact information

McDowell Mission (now called The Community Crossing)

The McDowell Mission Project was started in 1991 by Jim and Susan Nance to assist the Gary community. Gary is a former coal town which has seen a dramatic drop in population due to people looking elsewhere for work. There is a small but vibrant Catholic Community in Gary that worships at Our Lady of Victory Church. The mission serves its area through community development projects. The five non-negotiable values that the mission espouses in serving its community are: prayer, obedience, unity, worship, and heart for the lost. Students buy food and prepare their own meals. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).  

Website: www.mcdowellmission.org  Contact information

Nazareth Farm

A Catholic community of volunteers inspired by the Gospels and Social Teachings of the Church, Nazareth Farm is a retreat-like setting focused on prayer, community, simplicity and service. The organization is devoted to developing relationships and eliminating sub-standard housing through home repair in rural West Virginia. It provides a communal experience of Church as a center of action and prayer. Nazareth Farm was established in June 1979 as a place for volunteers to experience a week of simple living, service to the poor, and the joy of Christian community. Located in rural West Virginia, Nazareth Farm is a place of great beauty where volunteers can discover God’s presence in nature, in the people of the mountains, in each other, and above all, in God’s call of love to each one of us. Nazareth Farm’s religious retreat structure means days are rigidly structured from morning to night and allowing for plenty of reflection and prayer. Limited plumbing and central heating (one shower/student/week). Meals are provided. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).

Website: www.nazarethfarm.org  Contact information

PLEASE NOTE: Students attending the Nazareth Farm site will return in the late afternoon/evening of Saturday, October 24. You will not return in time to attend the home football game against Boston College.

New River Gorge National Park  

A rugged, white water river flowing northward through deep canyons, the New River is among the oldest rivers on the continent.  Located in southern West Virginia, New River Gorge National Park was established in 1978 to preserve and protect 53 miles of the New River as a free-flowing waterway. This unit of the National Park System encompasses over 70,000 acres of land along the New River between the towns of Hinton and Fayetteville. The park and the surrounding area are rich in cultural and natural history, and contain an abundance of scenic and recreational opportunities. Volunteers will work on trails, plant trees, paint signs and clean along the beach and campground. They will also spend a day on work projects at the Southern Appalachian Folk Life Center.  Interaction with local residents is limited.  Students can bring swimsuits in warmer weather and will buy food and prepare their own meals. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).

Website: www.nps.gov/neri/home.htm   Contact information

 

Rural Retreat Historical Society 

Rural Retreat is the home of Dr. Pepper, the pharmacist behind the beverage. This is a dynamic community where individuals work side by side with the students to complete work projects at homes and in the community. Students will have an opportunity to participate in many community activities, such as doing service with clients from a county social services department, and at the Rural Retreat Elementary School. The town of Rural Retreat and the county are in a state of transition, so the poverty in the area is not as visible as at other sites; but there is still a great need to which students will be introduced.
Shower time is limited; students should be prepared for about two showers during the week. Meals are provided as well as bedding -( pillow, and/or blankets and sheets) and towels.
Website: ruralretreathistoricalsociety.com   Contact information

 

Sacred Heart Parish  

Fr. Dunne has brought new life to this small but vibrant parish on the WV-KY border.  Students will work in and around the parochial school, which has grades K-6 and about 34 children and is run by Sr. Lillian, the principal.  Students will also stay with host families and help out with a fundraiser dinner for the school.  Fr. Dunne does a great job of giving students the opportunity to experience life in the small mining town of Williamson and to experience the ecumenism of the area.  Students buy food and prepare some of their own meals. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).  Contact information

St. Joseph Housing Repair Program

Saint Joseph’s Housing Repair Program is located on Main Street in Clintwood, VA. The community and its people have been greatly impacted by the coal, gas and timber industries and absentee ownership. Despite the poverty and the land and water devastation, community members are determined to assume control of their destiny. St. Joseph’s Catholic Church is one of several churches in the area that has formed a ministerial association to meet some of the needs of local residents. Its housing program offers low and no income people home repairs and engages the community in discussions around housing-related issues and actions. Students buy food and prepare their own meals.  Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets). Contact information 

West Virginia Ministry of Advocacy and Workcamps (WVMAW)

The WVMAW has been working with groups in the Appalachia region for the past 15-20 years. Working through different community and religious organizations in the area, it has been able to help with outreach and development projects. Due to the limited aid that FEMA and other agencies can offer, it is left to faith-based organizations to provide the only hope for many of the people in this region. Students should expect work projects at individual homes as well as opportunities that provide interaction with the community.  The group from ND often arrives at the same time as groups from other colleges, also.  Students may bring swimsuits and will buy food and prepare their own meals. Students provide their own bedding (sleeping bag, pillow, and/or blankets and sheets).  http://www.wvpresbytery.org/ (Choose Ministries in the menu and WVMAW is at the bottom)  Contact information

Back to the Top

 

The site you are visiting is designed with web standards. This note was made visible to you because you are on a non-traditional device or are using an outdated browser. You may only view the content of this site. Please visit Notre Dame Web Central's browser upgrade page for a list of browsers that supports web standards.