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Top Story
E&Y Your Master Plan Students Volunteer at Innisfree, Habitat for Humanity
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Students in the Ernst & Young YMP M.S. in Accounting Program harvest garlic at Innisfree Village. |
Participants in the Ernst & Young Your Master Plan program
know all about hard work. Not only are they all full-time employees
of Ernst & Young, which sponsors the two-year program, they’re also
students earning an M.S. in Accounting from the McIntire School of
Commerce.
So when these participants have some spare time, you might expect
them to sit back and put their feet up. But you’d be wrong: Many
participants in the E&Y YMP program are happy to put down their
laptops, roll up their sleeves, and get to work helping those in
need.
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YMP students give back to the community. |
On June 21, 2008, for example, 55 students from the YMP Class of
2008 volunteered 220 hours at the
Innisfree
Village.
Nestled in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, Innisfree is a
residential community for some 40 adults with intellectual
disabilities—known within the community as “coworkers”—and 25
full-time volunteers. Together, members of the community operate a
range of vegetable and flower gardens, as well as a weavery,
woodshop, kitchen, and bakery.
Not surprisingly, running these operations keeps community members
very busy—which is why they were delighted by the YMP participants’
help cleaning windows, spreading mulch, harvesting garlic, and
cleaning chicken houses.
“My team washed windows,” says YMP participant Carol Ku. “It was
great because we got a chance to meet the coworkers we were serving.
We also met volunteers who, incredibly, make a commitment of one
year or more to live and work at Innisfree. It was a cool
experience, and it fits with the culture of both U.Va. and Ernst &
Young, both of which support giving back to the community. I’m so
glad I did it.”
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Adds Thomas Ball, vice president of the 2008 YMP class, “One of the
volunteers was amazed at how much we were able to get done in such a
short period of time. Working alongside my classmates for a cause
greater than ourselves was deeply satisfying. Innisfree is a
beautiful place with an inspiring setting and inspiring volunteers.”
Although 100 percent of the Class of 2008 who were in
Charlottesville participated in the Innisfree project, a smaller
number of students have been volunteering on a regular basis helping
to build houses for a Charlottesville-based
Habitat for Humanity
project.
“I was impressed right from the start,” says Robin Francis,
Volunteer Coordinator for Habitat. “There is no mandatory service
component to the E&Y curriculum—the students just want to make a
difference,” she says. “They’ll do everything from pounding nails,
to framing houses, to hanging drywall. Without participants like
those from the E&Y program, many houses simply wouldn’t get built.”
Ball finds the balance between working in the YMP program and
volunteering for Habitat for Humanity “a great match.”
“It’s great to spend time outdoors,” he says. “It’s great to work
with fellow students in a setting different from the office or
classroom. And, perhaps best of all, you really get to see the
fruits of your labor.”
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