Parkview, 4-H Club youth, donate fleece blankets to PADS

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By Tom Siebert

As the season of giving coincides with cold weather and early darkness, Kendall County youth are showing warmth and brightness to the homeless community.

Students from Parkview Academy and members of a 4-H Club, both in Yorkville, recently donated colorful fleece blankets to PADS’ temporary shelters.

Stagecoach Trail Blazers and Clover Buds 4-H Club in Yorkville pose for a photo. They made fleece blankets and donated them to PADS homeless shelters. Submitted photo

Jennifer Kaufman, leader of the Stagecoach Trailblazers and Cloverbuds 4-H Club, identified the need for thicker blankets when volunteering at the PADS site at Church of the Good Shepherd in Oswego.

“They have one room that gets really cold, and the guests would ask for extra blankets,” said Ms Kaufman, whose son Thomas, 15, spearheaded the project.

She said the materials were purchased at Jo-Ann Fabric and Craft Store, which offers a discount to the 4-H club, and later woven into double-tiered blankets by the Trail Blazers, ages eight to 15, and the Clover Buds, five to seven.

“It made me very happy that we were able to help,” Ms Kaufman said.

Another blanket drive was conducted by students at Parkview Academy, one of the seven overnight shelters that PADS operates during the colder months.

In addition to donating the decorative blankets, the Parkview students made greeting cards and a festive banner which read, “To Our Friends At PADS” that welcomed homeless guests to the school gym on a recent Wednesday evening.

“All of the blankets were amazing,” said Peggy McNamara, PADS site coordinator at Parkview. “I got teary-eyed when I saw them. Those kids reached out to us!”

This year is the 10th that Kendall County PADS has been providing safe-havens and nutritious meals to the local homeless community. Social work interns from Aurora University assist guests with employment, personal issues, and permanent housing.

Each shelter is open one overnight per week from 7 p.m. until 7 a.m. through April 18, 2020. The nights and sites are as follows:

• Sundays: Cross Lutheran Church, 8609 Route 47, Yorkville;

• Mondays: Yorkville Congregational United Church of Christ, 409 Center Parkway, Yorkville;

• Tuesdays: Harvest New Beginnings church, 5315 Douglas Road, Oswego;

• Wednesdays: Parkview Christian Academy, north campus, 202 East Countryside Parkway, Yorkville;

• Thursdays: Trinity United Methodist Church, 2505 Boomer Lane, Yorkville;

• Fridays: Church of the Good Shepherd, 5 West Washington Street, Oswego;

• Saturdays: St. Luke’s Lutheran Church, 53 Fernwood Road, Boulder Hill, Montgomery.

PADS of Kendall County is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit group funded by gifts and grants as well as donations from individuals, organizations, and businesses. Those who wish to donate, volunteer, or learn more about helping the homeless may call 630-334-8180 or visit the website at kendallcountypads.org.

Tom Siebert is the assistant director for Community Relations Public Action to Deliver Shelter (PADS) of Kendall County.

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