With concealed faces, shielded eyes and gloved hands, the students squirted a fragrant gel on strangers in downtown Blacksburg.
A year ago, this might have felt like a scene from a science-fiction movie or an offbeat prank, but in 2020, it’s a welcomed act of service.
“We’ve had a great response from the community,” said Fernanda Gutierrez, a second-year graduate student in the Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine’s public health program. “When they see we’re giving out hand sanitizer and distributing masks, they’re really happy.”
Gutierrez is one of a handful of Virginia Tech students who routinely spend their Friday evenings giving out personal protective equipment and medical-related information to help fight the COVID-19 pandemic in Blacksburg. Embracing the name “COVID Crushers,” the students run a booth at the intersection of College Avenue and Draper Road from 6 to 9 p.m., where they also model the appropriate safety gear and provide a COVID-19-related trivia contest and prizes.
“There’s definitely a good energy here,” said Teagan Neveldine, a fellow graduate student in the public health program. “I think everyone wants to keep Blacksburg thriving and on its feet.”
Gutierrez and fellow Masters of Public Health student Teace Markwalter coordinate the weekly event at the request of Blacksburg Chief of Police Anthony Wilson, while another student in the program, Laura Lang, serves as the group’s outreach coordinator.
“It’s just sort of a grass roots effort that they took the ball and ran with and it’s doing such a great service for our community,” Wilson said. “They’re making connections with people that we would probably never be able to reach.”
Wilson said he first connected with the students through a Virginia Tech advisory committee to local and university officials that does regular check-ins to evaluate the area’s efforts to mitigate the spread of the virus.
“They were some of the first students to say, ‘we’re all in.’ They wanted to not just sit still during the pandemic, they wanted to be a part of the response,” he said.
Wilson said the students had not only been a critical part in organizing and running the downtown project, but also in creating pandemic and assistance-related materials for the area’s Spanish-speaking population. He hopes the COVID Crushers’ efforts soon expand to other downtown locations and even begin holding regular information sessions at apartment complexes.
“From kids to older adults to freshmen, being able to hit all these different age groups and see that they’ve responded well and are really interested, that’s been really cool,” Markwalter said.
“We’ve learned so much just by talking to people and seeing what their barriers are,” said Gutierrez. “That’s really helping us better serve the community.”
They credited their coursework within the program for providing them the tools they needed to set up and run the COVID Crushers within a week of Chief Wilson’s request.
“This really has shown how important and how useful those things we learn in class are,” Lang said.