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Community Engagement During COVID-19

June 12th, 2020

From right, in a photo taken in pre-pandemic times, The Citizen’s publisher Andrew Jenner 鈥04 and assistant editor Randi B. Hagi 鈥14, with publishers Bridget Nolan Manley and Ryan Alessi. (COURTESY PHOTO)

Over these past few months, Crossroads has collected (through the grapevine) snippets of information about how our alumni are engaging in their communities with the COVID-19 pandemic. Here鈥檚 a few we鈥檝e saved to share:

SINCE 2018, The Citizen (www.hburgcitizen.com) has provided free, online, independent journalism for Shenandoah Valley readers, with pandemic coverage featuring in-depth looks at government budget decisions, health and medical issues, the food industry and more. The publishers are Andrew Jenner 鈥04, Bridget Nolan Manley and Ryan Alessi. Randi B. Hagi 鈥14 is an assistant editor. Freelance contributors have included Ryan Eshleman-Robles 鈥13, Liesel Graber 鈥18, Harrison Horst 鈥18, John Leonard 鈥92, and Luisa Miller 鈥17.

STUCK AT HOME? Want to dance? Want to dance with somebody? Katie Mansfield, STAR lead trainer, started “Dancing Resilience,” a virtual community of around 740 members, dancing five times day, and connecting globally through music and movement. Katie recently finished her doctorate in expressive arts and conflict transformation with the European Graduate School in Switzerland, so she can not only dance but she can share theory behind it. Ask to join the “Dancing Resilience” group on Facebook.

WE KNOW MORE ROYALS are sewing masks out there, but here鈥檚 a shoutout to Phil Helmuth 鈥76, volunteer development coordinator with Mennonite Disaster Services, who helped to coordinate production of homemade masks among Mennonite church congregations and Old Order groups here in the Valley.

KEN SEITZ 鈥60 has been keeping a daily journal to chronicle life under lockdown at Virginia Mennonite Retirement Community, focusing on what is different about each day, from phone conversations to emails, the stock market, Zoom church, weather, and bits of inspiration from poetry and readings. 鈥淲ere I not recording the daily happenings and events of our lives, many of them trivial, we鈥檇 look back and wonder how did we survive? What was it like?鈥 His wife Audrey Metz 鈥62 is also writing, but prefers to compose by hand.

RITA M. SMITH 鈥86, Blountstown, Fla., shared the news this winter of her promotion as the statewide public health director of nursing at the Florida Department of Health. Then in March, she emailed us to let us know she was activated to the Florida Emergency Operations Command for the COVID-19 pandemic. Rita is pursuing her MPH from Florida State University, and holds a DNP from the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

ALSO IN HARRISONBURG, Kirsten Moore 鈥93 opened Magpie and Friends Market, partnering with farmers, chefs and bakers who usually supply to restaurants to serve customers in a no-touch, drive-through format. She will open Magpie Diner and Bakery in the coming months. Kirsten was a panelist during a May webinar hosted by the 黑料正能量 Business and Professional Club on the theme of 鈥渟uccessful pivots during the COVID-19 pandemic鈥 (Jair Drooger 鈥97, of CT Assist and 黑料正能量鈥檚 new Center for Innovation and Leadership, and trustee Deanna Reed, mayor of Harrisonburg, also joined.)

GWEN SNAVELY ANGEL 鈥98, Seattle, Wa., was featured in a photoessay in the May issue of Rolling Stone magazine with other healthcare professionals on the front lines in Seattle. She is an assistant nurse manager in emergency services at University of Washington Harborview Medical Center.

ALSO IN SEATTLE, Eric Moyer, class of 鈥03, was among three volunteer designers with the nonprofit Design That Matters to create one of the first open source 3-D printed face shields 鈥 and this is cool 鈥 fellow alum Gwen Angel was a collaborator. Eric is an engineer at Boeing. Check it out at designthatmatters.com.

IN JUST TWO WEEKS, April Hepler MA 鈥12 (counseling), helped to launch the Shenandoah Valley Emotional Support Line, a COVID-19 hotline staffed by volunteer mental health professionals. April is executive director of Adagio House, which also employs Casey Hurren MA 鈥18 (counseling), Rebecca Peifer 鈥00, MA 鈥18 (counseling), and current graduate student Melissa Fisher.

EVAN LANDES 鈥03, Raleigh, N.C., is an assistant manager at Octapharma Inc., which is involved in plasma donation collection, and specifically at this time, focusing on convalescent plasma of recovered COVID-19 patients.