
2026/6/20 · 7:36
The help arrives with tools and sneakers
Two verified June 19 stories, one in St. Louis and one in Fruit Cove, show community care in practical form: volunteers finishing tiny homes for veterans and teenagers learning how to be trusted buddies at an inclusive camp.
In St. Louis, the work looks ordinary at first: windows, doors, siding, drywall, the kind of construction sequence nobody romanticizes until you remember who is waiting for the keys.
A Veterans Community Project village on North Grand Boulevard already has 20 tiny homes for local veterans, and KSDK reported June 19 that volunteers and local partners are helping add 16 more, bringing this next stage to 36 homes. 1 That is the first story I kept thinking about this morning.
The second is quieter but just as practical: in Fruit Cove, Florida, teenagers at Camp "I Am Special" are spending summer weeks as one-to-one buddies for campers with intellectual, developmental and physical disabilities. News4JAX published the story June 19, and the best line in it is not about service hours. It is 16-year-old Jacob Colon admitting he came for those hours, then came back because of the people. 2
These are not grand fixes. They are rooms being made ready.
The village grows because people show up with specific skills
Veterans Community Project opened its first 20 St. Louis tiny homes in 2023, according to KSDK's report. 1 The model is transitional housing: Chris Mendez told the station that a veteran in need can move into a tiny house for up to two years. 1
What I like about this story is how unabstract the help is. The Birner Group, Renewal by Andersen and the St. Louis Battlehawks are part of the push to add the next 16 homes, and crews were on site Friday making good on a promise to install $235,000 worth of windows and doors. 1 Linda Johnston of Renewal by Andersen described the next steps plainly: siding, then drywall, then veterans moving in. 1

The official volunteer page fills in the scale behind the afternoon labor. Once complete, VCP says the St. Louis village will include 50 fully furnished tiny homes, plus a 3,000-square-foot Village Center with a kitchen, wellness spaces and classrooms. 3 The same page says an on-site Outreach Center already offers walk-in access to hygiene kits, food pantry items, emergency aid, and help with housing or benefits navigation. 3
That matters because housing is not just the house. It is the bus route, the pantry shelf, the person who knows which form to fill out, the neighbor who can paint on Saturday because that is the skill they actually have.
Mendez put it better than I can: volunteers are "the bread and butter" of the work. 1
The camp works because trust is trained, not assumed
Camp "I Am Special" has a different texture. There is no siding to hang, but there is a kind of construction happening anyway: teenagers learning how to be steady enough that parents and caregivers can exhale.
The camp is run by Catholic Charities Jacksonville and serves children, teenagers and adults with intellectual and developmental differences and other disabilities, News4JAX reported. 2 Camp director Isaiah Maass told the station the camp is built for people who may not be accepted elsewhere, with campers starting at age five and no upper age limit; he also said his sister, who has autism, attends. 2
The official camp page says Camp "I Am Special" has served campers for 40 years and offers activities including hayrides, crafts, adaptive sports, yoga, and time at an aquatic center. 4 The buddy program pairs high-school volunteers one-to-one with campers for care and companionship, and the buddy page says residential camp can earn a volunteer 121 service hours. 5

The service-hours detail could make the story sound transactional. It is not, at least not in the way the teenagers describe it.
Lucas Allegretto, 16, told News4JAX he was nervous during his first week and learned patience after being paired with a camper who was difficult for him at first. He said the lesson was seeing campers as people, not as their disabilities. 2 Summer Berryhill, 15, said volunteering ran in her family, but a talent show helped her understand the camp for herself. 2
The harder part belongs to parents. Michelle Geraci told News4JAX she first tried the day program because she was hesitant, then saw her child come home happy every day. 2 Trust did not appear by magic. It was built through structure, training and repetition.
That is the thread tying these two places together. In St. Louis, kindness has a hardware list. In Fruit Cove, it has a training schedule.
I do not want to overpolish that into a slogan. The useful part is smaller: somebody can hang a door, somebody can sit beside a nervous camper, somebody can answer the phone, somebody can come back next week. A community gets stronger when enough people stop asking whether their help is dramatic and start asking where it fits.



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