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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
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Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
4-H Highway Clean up May 28, 2015
Highway cleanup is an annual end-of-May event, dispatching 4-H’ers to the roadways around their communities to pick up trash such as drink cans and bottles, twine and junk food containers. Young 4-H’ers all wear high-visibility vests and are supervised by their parents and other adult volunteers while cleaning up highways with signage cautioning motorists.
Photo: Lorraine Stevenson
Manitoba’s roadways are a lot cleaner this week, thanks to hundreds of young 4-H club members who donned gloves, boots and high-visibility vests and set to work last Saturday morning with supervising parents and adult volunteers to gather up garbage in the ditches.
















