Students, Staff, Faculty from New Mexico Tech Help Clean Up City

April 1, 2023


Second-annual spring cleanup day – ‘The Big Event’ – held April 1 in Socorro

Isaiah Gurule, Isaiah Sandoval
Isaiah Gurule, left, and Isaiah Sandoval spread gravel on the playground at Cottonwood Valley Charter School in Socorro April 1. Gurule is a civil and environmental engineering graduate student from Abiquiu, and Sandoval is a computer science major from Grants.

SOCORRO, N.M. – To express appreciation to their host community and to spend time outdoors on a sunny Saturday morning, 44 New Mexico Tech students, faculty members, and staff gathered April 1 to clean up and help beautify Socorro. Groups scattered to three sites around the city – Cottonwood Valley Charter School, just off California Street near the new Circle K, and near the Loma Vista Apartments – to spread gravel and pick up trash for the university’s second annual community service day dubbed The Big Event. 

California Street
Vo Hoa, left, and Thieu Tan, both undergraduate petroleum engineering students, pick up trash at a vacant lot off California Street for The Big Event April 1, 2023. 

Vice President for Student Life and Chief Diversity Officer David L. Greene told the students at the kickoff breakfast prior to The Big Event  that being a part of a small community like Socorro, their actions could make a big impact.

“It should make you feel good that you are doing something for where you live,” he said. “Give service with an open heart and mind.”

Student cleaning up Camino Real
Xuan Pham, a graduate student studying chemical engineering, cleans up trash near the Loma Vista Apartments in Socorro for The Big Event April 1, 2023.

Dean of Students Jennifer Chapman said that she is working to make community service a regular part of student life at NMT, with opportunities available throughout the year to work on projects around Socorro as individuals and as part of student clubs and organizations.

“We’re inviting the community to reach out to us,” she said, adding that her office’s website – nmt.edu/studentaffairs/bigevent.php – now includes a form for residents to request student service.

Students pick up trash
Matthew Thompson, left, and Alejandro Lopez, both mechanical engineering students, clean up a field near the Loma Vista Apartments for The Big Event April 1, 2023.

Janet Baffoe, a chemical engineering graduate student originally from Ghana, said she volunteered to get a break from homework and studying.

“I’m here to pick up trash and meet new people,” she said.

Students at pre-Big Event breakfast
NMT students gather for breakfast prior to The Big Event April 1, 2023. From left: Funmilola Nwokocha, Ph.D. student in mechanical engineering; Mary Nwokocha, second-grader at Parkview Elementary; Harriet Tetteh, master's student in mineral engineering; Janet Baffoe, chemical engineering graduate student; and Jonathan Asante, petroleum engineering graduate student. 

Isaiah Gurule, a civil and environmental engineering graduate student originally from Abiquiu, said his involvement with The Big Event matches his interest in preventing and cleaning up pollution.

Since its introduction in 1982, The Big Event has become the largest one-day, student-run service project in the nation, with students at universities across the country participating in community service and showing appreciation to their host cities.