Disaster Relief
Published:
August 9, 2019
Last updated:
March 30, 2026

SUNY/CUNY Cohort 5 Ends With The Reopening Of A High School In Guaynabo, Puerto Rico

Disaster Relief
Published:
09 Aug 2019
Last updated:
30 Mar 2026
Key Takeaways
  • This group of CUNY Service Corps volunteers has been engaging, inspiring, and hilarious.
  • Nearly two years later, art projects, homework, and textbooks are unmoved from how they were placed a few days before Maria.

Today is our last day with Cohort 5! This group of CUNY Service Corps volunteers has been engaging, inspiring, and hilarious. In the past two weeks, our teams have bonded over bad jokes, pouring rain, and hard work. They accepted every challenge with an open mind, pursued each new task with determination, and learned new skills with a positive attitude.

Along with finishing two houses, officially completing our work queue for the summer, and clearing 5,760 square feet of land for planting at one of the local farms, they also began the trail work to re-open the Vientos Alisios Trail in El Yunque-- a trail that has been untouched since Hurricane Hugo in 1989. On top of all that, this cohort worked with our partner, Caras Con Causa, to reopen a highschool today.

Caras Con Causa has been working hard this past year to turn Guaynabo’s local highschool into Puerto Rico’s first ever charter school, named Escuela Con Causa. The first day of school is Wednesday, and the new staff and teachers for Escuela Con Causa could not be more excited. Although this school was still operational after Hurricane Maria, many of the classrooms were abandoned and have not been touched since the storm. Nearly two years later, art projects, homework, and textbooks are unmoved from how they were placed a few days before Maria.

Today, our group of volunteers revitalized these rooms to give the incoming students a fresh and clean learning environment. Vice President Marisol Quiñones aims to integrate a “holistic approach to education” by meeting the emotional needs of the students. These students have suffered greatly after Hurricane Maria, and Caras Con Causa wants to ensure their mental health is in good condition in order for them to excel in their education.

Cohort 5, thank you for your compassion for the future students of Escuela Con Causa! You did some amazing work here with us these past two weeks and it has been an absolute pleasure to work with you.

#funfriday #flashbackfriday #nechamacommunity #manywaysofgiving

Posts authored collectively by the NECHAMA team. NECHAMA: Jewish Response to Disaster is a leading national organization in disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, guided by the Jewish value of Tikkun Olam.

Related topics

Join the Work

There are many ways to be part of NECHAMA’s mission. Whether you bring a group, volunteer as an individual, support the work financially, or partner with us, you are helping families return home and volunteering in a meaningful way.

Person wearing a blue shirt, gloves, and a blue face mask using a DEWALT cordless drill on a wall in a construction or renovation setting.

Donate

Make recovery possible after disaster, now and in the future.

Four people wearing blue shirts and hats using power drills on a concrete surface outdoors under a partly cloudy sky.

Volunteer

Take part in hands-on recovery that changes lives, including your own.

Three women smiling and posing together in a construction or renovation setting wearing casual work clothes, safety goggles, and name tags reading Lucy, Rachel, and Robin.

Partner with us

Respond to disasters with your organization