- Courtesy of Hannah Reid
- Campers making their vehicles
Driscoll Sinnott, 10, watched with envy last weekend as his mom, Hannah Reid, volunteered to help clean up downtown Montpelier, where all his favorite stores were in shambles.
The contamination from the floodwaters made it too dangerous for him to pitch in, Reid told her son.
But she had a different idea for how he could help. Driscoll and his brother, Bailey, were attending a camp at Wilder Arts Studio, where they were creating motorless vehicles to race in a soapbox derby at the end of the weeklong session. What if they turned the event into a "Hopebox Derby" and raised money from sponsors?
Maria Arsenlis, director of the camp and cofounder of the Montpelier makerspace, loved the idea. So Reid got to work, taking care of outreach and communication and recruiting other parents, who created T-shirts and a poster.
Driscoll made a promotional video with Arsenlis, in which he showed flooded Onion River Outdoors, where he got his first mountain bike, and lamented that all the candy went to waste at State Street candy store Delish.
“Please sponsor Montpelier and try to help it come back to normal, or at least better, maybe faster,” he said into the camera with a smile.
The flooding has been hard in a different way for kids, who can't fully understand the impact the way adults do but still want to help, Arsenlis said.
And help they certainly have. The kids' appeals raised more than $14,000 for flood relief, donated to Montpelier Alive’s Flood Recovery Fund and the Vermont Community Foundation’s VT Flood Response & Recovery Fund.
Related A Tour of Montpelier Arts Businesses and Organizations Affected by the Flood
“They’re worried, and they feel really very helpless,” Reid said. “And I think they are really excited about being able to have an impact and be a part of the community recovery effort.”
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