Local Student Fundraises for Trip to Ghana

By Linda CarmanPrint Story | Email Story
Lanesboro native Devin Rock is collecting returnable cans to support a trip to Ghana later this year.
Williamstown - Giant clear plastic bags bulge with many-colored empty returnable soft drink cans, bags stacked upon bags, filling most of the Rock family’s garage at 6 Leslie St., Lanesboro. It’s easy to see why the family’s cars are parked in the driveway. Collecting returnable cans and bottles is one way 20-year-old Devin Rock, a third year nursing student at St. Anselm College, hopes to raise money for a three-week stint helping at clinics and hospitals in Ghana this winter. On Aug. 11, Williamstown residents will find Rock collecting these returnable cans and bottles at the transfer station on Simonds Road. Earlier this week, Rock, sitting at the family dining table, talked about his efforts and the trip itself. A June collection of returnables at the Lanesboro recycling station raised $325. Now friends and family who know of Rock’s project drop their returnables in the garage. If they can’t, a phone call will bring him to pick them up. A benefit pasta dinner at the Chef’s Hat on Simonds Road, a restaurant owned by his father David since last winter, raised about $1,200 “It really turned out well,” Rock said. “People donated everything.” Each can raises a nickel toward the $4,500, which includes the cost of his plane ticket. Rock, a 2005 graduate of Mount Greylock Regional High School, is working as a certified nurses assistant (CNA) this summer at Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield. A lifelong resident of Lanesboro, he has a longstanding interest in medicine, and enjoys the rigorous four-year nursing program at St. Anselm, a Benedictine-run college in Manchester, N.H. He has previous experience volunteering, in 2004 with the COTY (Catholic Outreach To Youth) group in Haiti, where he worked in a remote village. This past spring, he was part of a college group volunteering at a Benedictine-run school for autistic and Down syndrome young people. Hearing a friend’s enthusiastic description of her experience with Cross Cultural Solutions in India, Rock knew he had found another goal. The organization sends volunteers in the fields of social service, education and medicine to work side-by-side with local people, experiencing the culture, in 12 countries. The New York Times has called the programs, varying in length from one to 12 weeks, akin to a short stint in the Peace Corps. The organization is widely featured - its website says in more than 500 publications and broadcasts. These include, besides the Times, Newsweek, Time, USA Today, CNN, The Today Show, National Geographic Traveler and the ABC Nightly News. The organization, founded in 1995 and based in New Rochelle, N.Y., has sent more than 10,000 volunteers to Brazil, China, Costa Rica, Ghana, Guatemala, India, Morocco, Peru, Russia, South Africa, Tanzania and Thailand. Now Rock and the friend whose stories of her time in India inspired him, will be joined by three more friends headed for Ghana on Dec. 14, returning Jan. 4. More friends would have joined, he said, but bowed out on learning that the trip would be over winter break. Rock’s experience in Ghana, unlike that in Haiti, will be in a city close to the coast of the Gulf of Guinea. This city of 76,000 is Ho, in the southeastern part of the country. There, the organization’s resident staff will organize him and other volunteers in local school and hospitals - there are three - where their workday will run from 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The afternoons and evenings are designated for meeting local people and learning their culture. Group members live together and are transported to their workplaces. Rock says he expects to teach basic nutrition, help as a CNA, and possibly teach basic math and English. “It’s a little scary. You’re fairly independent,” he said. “I’m trying to gear my activities towards young people.” For Rock, who played football, basketball and baseball at Mount Greylock, that will almost certainly involve engaging in sports. Noting the country’s “huge” passion for soccer - its team excelled at last year’s World Cup - he said, “We have a fair amount of time after work, and I definitely want to incorporate sports in that free time. Like music, it’s a universal language.” “I’ll help in places that are already up and running. I’ll be an extra pair of hands,” he said. “You get to see how they do things there.” “Because I don’t have a degree yet I won’t do anything very technical. But being there, being willing to help is like a sign of hope and encouragement, being there with an open mind. You can be a role model that they’ll continue on.” ‘I feel like I totally understand volunteering, how it helps you and the other person. My school is really into it. It’s a great school for that.” Probably Berkshire County’s most famous visitor to Ghana was W.E.B. DuBois, who lived there for years until his death, when he was given a state funeral. Rock noted that Ghana receives high marks both economically and politically. Its history includes its own great empire, long running wars of resistance to British colonial rule by the Ashanti people, and in 1957, becoming the first sub-Saharan African country to gain independence. The country’s name, Ghana, means warrior king; the British called it the Gold Coast. Along with its neighboring Ivory Coast, a former French colony, it was an active port from the 1400s through the 19th century for Europeans trading in slaves, gold and ivory. This part of its past can make it an emotionally fraught experience for African-Americans whose ancestors may have been exiled into captivity on the notorious slave ships. “It’s considered one of the safe countries in Africa,” Rock said. “Accra (the capital) is a place people want to visit.” He expects not to have time for excursions or to keep them short. He’ll be learning about the country first-hand.
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Williamstown Charter Review Panel OKs Fix to Address 'Separation of Powers' Concern

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Charter Review Committee on Wednesday voted unanimously to endorse an amended version of the compliance provision it drafted to be added to the Town Charter.
 
The committee accepted language designed to meet concerns raised by the Planning Board about separation of powers under the charter.
 
The committee's original compliance language — Article 32 on the annual town meeting warrant — would have made the Select Board responsible for determining a remedy if any other town board or committee violated the charter.
 
The Planning Board objected to that notion, pointing out that it would give one elected body in town some authority over another.
 
On Wednesday, Charter Review Committee co-Chairs Andrew Hogeland and Jeffrey Johnson, both members of the Select Board, brought their colleagues amended language that, in essence, gives authority to enforce charter compliance by a board to its appointing authority.
 
For example, the Select Board would have authority to determine a remedy if, say, the Community Preservation Committee somehow violated the charter. And the voters, who elect the Planning Board, would have ultimate say if that body violates the charter.
 
In reality, the charter says very little about what town boards and committees — other than the Select Board — can or cannot do, and the powers of bodies like the Planning Board are regulated by state law.
 
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