Jacques Star/Olympic Peninsula News Group
Teen workers and Boys & Girls Club staff make sure lunch sacks are filled with nutritious items.

Jacques Star/Olympic Peninsula News Group Teen workers and Boys & Girls Club staff make sure lunch sacks are filled with nutritious items.

Teens help provide thousands of meals this summer

Boys Girls Clubs of Olympic Peninsula steps in with program

SEQUIM — A handful of teens worked busily at tables inside the Carroll C. Kendall Boys & Girls Club in Sequim, placing food items into opened white paper bags on a recent Tuesday morning.

The selection was nutritious and substantial. Italian sub sandwiches. Snack-sized bags of snap peas. Fruit cups.

Milk cartons, regular and chocolate, were lined up on the tables like soldiers waiting to be deployed. They would be placed into coolers and then carried to the vehicles of volunteer drivers.

From there, they would be distributed to children at Carrie Blake Community Park, Greywolf Elementary School and the Elk Creek, Mountain View Court and SeaBreeze apartment complexes.

Some of the lunches were distributed there at the Boys & Girls Club.

As that day’s lunch items were being placed into bags, Child Nutrition Director Kat Malcom was in the nearby commercial kitchen preparing the next day’s meal: chicken enchilada wraps. With so many lunches to distribute, preparation must be done the day before, Malcolm said.

At the Turner Unit Boys & Girls Club in Port Angeles, the same daily ritual took place this summer as part of the Summer Food Service Program. Distribution sites included Jefferson Elementary School, Dream Park at Erickson Playfield, Shane Park and Evergreen Family Village.

The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula is a sponsor of the program, providing nutritious meals to children when school is not in session.

Free meals that meet federal nutrition guidelines are provided to all children 18 and younger at approved sites in areas with significant concentrations of low-income children.

For the youngest employees of the Boys & Girls Club, filling the bags was just one of their duties this summer. They also helped distribute the lunches.

Although the program is overseen by adults, it serves as workforce training for teens.

Those who want a job must apply for the paid positions and go through an interview process. Once hired, they work 25-30 hours per week during their summer break.

“They have to interview (and) they have to complete a resume,” said Sara Maloney, director of philanthropy for the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula. “They have to have their food handler’s permit. This is a true work experience. They have to be reliable. They have to turn up every day. They have to complete a number of Boys & Girls Cubs of America trainings to make sure that we’re protecting youth that they might come into contact with. This is an actual, serious position.”

Siblings Arrow and Isaac Hedgecomb are two of the Sequim location’s teen employees. Arrow, 17, is a senior at Sequim High School. This was their fourth summer as a paid Boys & Girls Club employee.

Isaac, 15, is a sophomore. This was his second summer to help feed kids.

“When I first started doing it, I wanted to be more involved in the club because (I was) here for so many years and I was like, ‘You know what? I think I should try to give back to my community,’” said Arrow, who hopes to join the U.S. Air Force and eventually work in the medical field.

Isaac said most of the kids who received the meals were “really grateful,” but he fears that some who needed a meal were too embarrassed or shy to venture from their homes.

Maloney said more than 16,000 meals and snacks were dispersed during the months of June and July alone.

“When children qualify for free or reduced lunch at school, when the schools are not in session, that means they are not receiving lunch at school,” Maloney said. “And so, we help bridge that gap, and we have 11 sites between Sequim and Port Angeles that we take food to.

“We prepare the food in our central kitchens here and at our club in Port Angeles, and then we have a distribution, and we take the food to where our kids are. These are free meals to any child under the age of 18, and you do not have to prove need to be served a meal. You just come.”

Isaac, who has been a member of the Boys & Girls Club since he was in kindergarten or first grade, said he has enjoyed interacting every day with kids he encountered at the distribution sites. And he also has enjoyed working an actual job.

“I really like it,” he said. “It makes me feel a little more independent.”

The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula offers a variety of services for youth ages 6-18. The Sequim site, located at 400 W. Fir St., serves about 200 kids a day. The facility features a 3,300-square-foot game room, a library, an art room, a computer lab, a multi-purpose room and a full-size gym.

For more information about the organization, visit bgc-op.org/CCK-sequim or call 360-582-1960.

________

Kathy Cruz is the editor of the Sequim Gazette of the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which also is composed of other Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News and Forks Forum. She can be reached by email at kathy.cruz@sequimgazette.com.

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