One list of El Paso teens used their last weekends' of summer making sure children won't feel any longer loss compared to they already have.
After four weekends of labor, Troop 4 took their last steps the ladders to produce a shed.
"Last year, a bunch of kids jumped a fence and stole bike in the kids," said Marco Zamora. road bicycles
At the beginning of 2010, your son or daughter Crisis Center had 50 bikes, but by May they just had eight.
Bikes were quickly donated. With minimal safe-keeping the newest bikes had no choice but to generally be ignored on view along with the next wind storm. Which is where Zamora with the exceptional Boy Scout troop from west El Paso come in.
"I've done lots of things you will come to the Child Crisis Center with my church and I such as the organization," said Zamora.
He also likes the Thanksgiving Day parade. mountain bikes
"It was a gingerbread house built for a parade float for Thanksgiving," said Zamora.
That float has been transformed into your shed that should keep your bikes safe. Zamora admits they did not take action alone.
"We got donations from several donations in El Paso," he explained.
They received from monetary donations to wood and paint from Lowes; shingles from Frontier Roofing's plus the list continues on. Road Bikes
However, it is the times of day at work devote by Troop 4 that should hold the shed ready by Monday morning and prior to a teens head back to high school knowing they did not waste their summer.
"There's better things in life than gaming," he was quoted saying.
Like putting on the final coat of paint and unveiling your garden storage towards the foster kids who can now sleep tight knowing their bikes defintely won't be stolen again.
"It'll be rewarding because I know the children will need it and it'll conserve the crisis center," he explained.
Zamora said they may be investigating doing other projects in the neighborhood.