Boston Civic Engagement; Back at Theroch

The library that BCE created with Bain Capital last year at Theroch Community Center

by Foundations Boston Civic Engagement team corps member Katie Venetsky

The Susan Curry Community Center– in the basement of the Theroch Apartments, just off of Blue Hill Ave.– is an oasis for many youth in the area who need a safe place to go after school or on the weekends. Sharon Curry, the woman in charge of this amazing place, named the community center after her mother, Susan. Susan Curry has been a hardworking force in this particular neighborhood that has been rocked by gang and drug violence for a few decades, but now, with the creation of the community center, she has truly turned around this community.

This isn’t the first time BCE has been involved in service at this community center. Last year BCE partnered with Bain Capital, the Bain Capital Project Leader team and the Summit Partners Team and transformed a storage space in the back of the community center into a beautiful library. This group also painted panel murals and built heavy-duty shelves. Since then, BCE’s partnership with the center has only grown stronger. This past Thanksgiving, we made fleece blankets for the residents of the of the building and, more recently, built more heavy-duty shelves for another storage area in the community center. Soon, we are going back as a team to help paint a wall and build more shelves to organize the back storage space so it can be utilized.

Maintaining partnerships such as these has been incredibly important to the Civic Engagement team and to the site as a whole. For us to engage the communities as well as schools has proven to be very important in creating safe spaces for those in the area. For Susan and her daughter Sharon, creating a community center out of the basement of Theroch Apartments on Sonoma Streethas truly created a legacy that safely supports the development of youth and communities and BCE truly feels lucky to help support that legacy.

A Win for the Winthrop on Global Youth Service Day

Written by Ashley Hackett, corps member on the Boston Civic Engagement Team

As I reflect on the service performed at the John Winthrop Elementary School,  a smile stretches across my face. If asked to sum up the day in a few words, the ones that instantly come to mind include dedicated volunteers, transformational service, and a supportive community.

On Saturday, April 16, the Foundations Boston Civic Engagement Team hosted a powerful day of service for the school as well as its surrounding community. Volunteers came from all walks of life, from National GridWestfield CapitalDay Pitney,IBM and the Legal Marketing Association as well as students from Showa, the Burke and Young Achievers Schools and members of the City and Young Heroes Advisory Boards.  Projects included painting motivational quotes throughout the second floor hallway, painting playground graphics in the courtyard, painting a mural for the school’s new outdoor theater, building an outdoor picnic area, revamping an existing mural, painting exhilarating panel murals for the library and gym, painting an inspiring 300 foot long mural, and building a peace garden inspired by the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute. 

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Even though the weather wasn’t favorable, the enthusiasm from the volunteers, the City Year corps members, and the community helped the day push on. A special thanks to Principal Walter Henderson and Sophia Bishop-Rice for all of their help and for delivering a moving opening speech.

Please check out some more photos on our Facebook page from Tom Story!

What is the Boston Civic Engagement TeamIn addition to helping schools and students reach new heights in academic performance, one team of City Year corps members recruits and mobilizes volunteers to transform school communities through physical service projects, such as building outdoor classroom spaces, landscaping and revitalizing sports and recreation spaces, painting murals, planting gardens, construction and creating playspaces. By engaging community members, corporate partners and civic leaders in this work, corps members help share the power of service to make positive, holistic change.

National Grid and PTC at the Haley

by Ashley Hackett, corps member serving on the Foundation to be Named Later/John W. Henry Family Foundation Boston Civic Engagement Team


What do you get when you combine three fantastic City Year teams, wonderful and hardworking sponsors/volunteers, and a school in need of a calming space for its children to work? Well, a successful service day, of course! On Saturday, March 12, the MFS Investment Management Team played host to the National Grid/PTC Blackstone Elementary School Team as well as the Foundation to be Named Later/John W. Henry Family Foundation Civic Engagement team at their very own Haley Elementary School service day. With the help of 30 volunteers from National Grid and PTC, this service day went off without hitch, leaving behind an inspirational and soothing space for the children to learn.

The day’s projects included patching a once empty wall then painting it with new, peaceful colors, painting a mural of a map of the city of Boston and another mural of motivational and uplifting words as well as making birdhouses – many built and painted by the youngest volunteers – to be hung throughout the schoolyard. The day was also made very special by PTC’s  contribution of a delicious pizza lunch to help keep hungry volunteers going until the very end.

All and all, the day was immeasurably successful and was greatly appreciated by the Haley team, faculty, and students. A special thanks to guest speakers, Bill Berutti and Ms. Gaskin, for their inspiring and encouraging words on behalf of PTC and the Haley Elementary School.

Click Here for the full Flickr Photo Album!

What is the Boston Civic Engagement Team? In addition to helping schools and students reach new heights in academic performance, one team of City Year corps members recruits and mobilizes volunteers to transform school communities through physical service projects, such as building outdoor classroom spaces, landscaping and revitalizing sports and recreation spaces, painting murals, planting gardens, construction and creating playspaces. By engaging community members, corporate partners and civic leaders in this work, corps members help share the power of service to make positive, holistic change.

How City Year Boston Taught Me About the Celtics

When I woke up this morning, I pulled on my uniform, brushed my teeth, packed my bag and then over breakfast, I made sure to check the score of the Celtics game.

A confession: I never used to be a basketball fan. Raised a good Bostonian, I can belt out “Sweet Caroline” without hesitation and watched Super Bowl XXXVIII with my entire neighborhood, but the Celtics never made it into my repertoire. Until now.

City Year has made me infinitely more aware of the game that often dominates not only inner-city pop culture but also childhood recreation. I’ve learned about Celtics players from neighborhood kids, and I’ve learned NBA fandom from my own teammates. I learned the rules of the game from watching a valiant effort by our City Year Boston Team in Bromley-Heath’s Behind the Badge Tournament two weeks ago. I have even learned the physical anatomy of basketball from all the courts we’ve painted and refurbished – most of which were back in use within minutes of safe drying time or the twist of the last bolt on a shiny new rim.

Nowadays, opening the paper does far more than tell me the score; all too often it unleashes stories of tragedy that also resonate with new meaning. Many of them are stories of violence just blocks from where we have served – even on the court where Bromley-Heath’s tournament took place. I’ve read these stories before, but my connection to them runs far deeper now. And though it saddens me all the more, it also ignites in me a far greater sense of purpose.

Leading volunteers in painting basketball courts isn’t going to put an end to violence, but it brings joy to a community to know that someone cares. Learning players’ names and stats does not substitute academic knowledge, but maybe it helps a kid relate to the material and to us. There is, after all, a truth to the universal language of sport. And I’m grateful for the crash course this year – I am not only a better sports fan for it, but a better Bostonian as well.