Community Service Project Ideas

  

Based on projects and programs completed in 2024, Community Service Ideas for 2025 include:

Meals

Feeding people is an overwhelming passion for Grangers. Ideas include supporting food banks, creating food baskets for community distribution, hosting dinners or preparing full meals for various events and needs, and collecting for food pantries or food drives.

Life Skills/Self-Sustainability

Grangers can teach classes and workshops in cooking, sewing, quilting, painting, carpentry, animal husbandry, defensive driving, pie making, crocheting, dancing, archery, and gardening, among many others. You can also consider holding debates to teach younger generations speaking skills.

Community Support

Granges adopt and clean highways, streams, parks, and cemeteries, donate the use of their Halls for community events, support various community projects, serve as an information hub for their towns on bulletin boards and social media, and host legislative forums and debates for candidates for various local positions.

Veterans

Grangers can write cards, make holiday stockings, adopt soldiers and send care packages, host appreciation dinners, honor veterans with Quilts of Valor, and lay wreaths and flags in cemeteries for the holidays. In addition, you can clean cemeteries, and bake cookies or other goodies for the military and VFWs.

Schools

Support schools in many ways, including collecting school supplies, volunteering at schools and community centers, donating to school closets and food pantries, making mittens, scarves, and hats, and giving directly to teachers, paraeducators, and staff to show appreciation.

Senior Centers

Many Granges find ways to support senior and assisted living centers by donating toiletries and non-skid socks, creating gift bags, holiday cards, and ornaments, and volunteering time to visit residents. Some Granges adopt nursing home residents who may not have family visiting or supporting them.

Supporting Grangers in Need

Whether donating to a Grange member or family after a disaster, driving members to appointments, or ensuring they attend Grange events, supporting the volunteers who make these efforts possible remains essential.