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Takoma Park students lend a shovel during snow day

WASHINGTON — For dozens of kids in Takoma Park, the hill behind the local middle school was the place to be on the snow day after President’s Day. By 2 p.m. the hill was buzzing with sledders and snowboarders.

But for many other high school and middle school students heading to Takoma Park Middle School, the day would be spent differently.

Kids who are members of Difference Makers fanned out through the neighborhoods to shovel sidewalks and driveways for free. The program is run by teachers at Takoma Park Middle School and is designed to give kids the chance to give back to their community and earn student service learning hours at the same time.[related_gallery align=”right”]

But Eleanor and Jasmine said for them, taking part was rooted in helping people who need an assist.

Both students said despite the cold temperatures, it wasn’t a chore:  it was fun.

Jasmine explained, “I mean, I shovel snow for my parents and I don’t really expect to get money anyway, so let’s help people — that’s my main thought.”

Eleanor said being with friends made the work go quickly.

Rory, a middle school student involved with Difference Makers, spent about three hours volunteering. He went from house to house and said the toughest part was navigating the sidewalks that hadn’t yet been cleared.

He hopes others join Difference Makers.

In Montgomery County, residents are required to clear their walkways within 24 hours after the snow stops.

WTOP’s Kate Ryan contributed to this report.

When DC froze: Remembering ‘Snowmageddon’ 10 years later

Mountains of snow buried the tarmac at Washington's Reagan National Airport. Sightseers used skis to slide through a snowy National Mall. Snow drifts piled up to the White House's windows. Ten years ago, D.C. bore the brunt of what came to be called Snowmageddon — one of the most severe winter storms in capital weather history. Between 1 and 3 feet of snow fell from Feb. 5 to Feb. 6, 2010: Flights at Reagan ground to a halt under 17.8 inches of snow — tame compared with Dulles, which saw over 32 inches.
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