A neighborhood that waits until a volunteer is gone to say thank you has waited too long.

It is a strange feature of community life that the cleanup that does not happen, the event that quietly folds, the committee with no one left to run it, are how we register the people who held those things together. By then the thanks comes too late, addressed to a contribution that has already ended. A functioning neighborhood feels like the natural order of things rather than an achievement, which is exactly why the people who achieve it go unthanked.
The unpaid labor is not abstract. The East Isles Neighborhood Association won an MWMO community grant to run Adopt-a-Drain across East Isles and the Wedge, where residents are asked to clear a storm drain twice a month so leaves and trash stay out of the lakes. The Lowry Hill East association has run monthly cleanups from April through November that pulled hundreds of pounds of trash off neighborhood streets and parks. Add the PTA parents folding chairs at Kenwood and the organizers who give up weekends so the rest of us show up to a finished event, and you have a great deal of work that appears on no budget and in almost none of our gratitude until it stops.
There is a practical argument alongside the moral one. Volunteer institutions run on a renewable resource, the willingness of people to keep showing up, and that willingness is sustained partly by feeling valued. A community that takes its volunteers for granted is quietly depleting the thing it depends on, one unthanked Saturday at a time.
Some associations hold annual recognition events, and they should. But the formal thanks of an organization is no substitute for the informal thanks of a neighbor: the word at the curb, the note, the simple acknowledgment that someone noticed the hours you gave. That kind of gratitude costs nothing and is in chronically short supply. So thank them now, while the contribution is ongoing and the thanks can still land. Thank the room parent, the drain adopter, the person with the clipboard.
[unverifiable: an opinion column; the volunteer programs cited are real and sourced, but no individual volunteer is named, consistent with a general reflection rather than a reported profile.]

A longtime resident thanks Kenwood Community School, the Lowry Hill Neighborhood Association and the neighborhood's volunteers.

A resident urges that the health of the lakes stay a standing item on neighborhood agendas, not an afterthought once school budgets and development are settled.
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Between its open sculpture garden, free gallery hours and a summer calendar of no-cost events, the Walker Art Center gives away enough of itself that Lowry Hill can treat it as a public square rather than an occasional splurge.