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KP Father-Son Duo’s Construction Savvy to Benefit
Orphanage
By Rodika Tollefson
KP News
Last fall, Vaughn resident Mark Plummer got a call from
a friend in Hawaii with a request for help designing a
septic system for an African orphanage. Don Burlingame,
who works in Hawaii but lives in Kitsap County, was
planning a trip to Kapiyo for a sanitati on
project, and had no luck with help in Hawaii.
Soon, the two men were not just
discussing site planning but trip planning as well:
Plummer had decided to join Burlingame on the journey.
Plummer, a retired Tacoma firefighter, owns Earth
Crafters, a Vaughn-based company that employs eight
people and specializes in site development including
septic systems, excavation, and road construction. “This
is like doing site development halfway across the
world,” he told Burlingame, who was already envisioning
much more than septic work in the future: plumbing,
lighting, and a medical clinic.
“I realized he had the enthusiasm
and I had the knowledge, so (I said), let’s just go,”
Plummer says.
Burlingame has more than just
enthusiasm. A construction company project manager, he
had visited Kapiyo last summer to build the actual
orphanage. Kapiyo, a town located 150 miles from the
capital, Nairobi, has about 30,000 people and a third of
them are orphans.
“About a year ago I walked into
church one morning and the pastor said, ‘Would you go to
Africa to build a school with me?’ I said, ‘Sure.’ I
thought he was joking,” Burlingame says.
The visit to Africa brought some
startling discoveries. The villagers got their drinking
water from a murky, polluted lake more than 1.2 miles
away. A hole served as the sewer, and there was no
electricity. After they built the school, Burlingame
decided he would return to do a septic system, finish
the well, and plan a medical facility on an adjacent
lot.
The team includes Plummer’s son,
Shane, who lives in Lakebay and works full-time for
Earth Crafters after recently graduating from college.
Shane has worked for his father since he was a teen.
“They told me about it and my heart went out to the
orphanage,” he says of his decision to go on
the
three-week trip.
The group will act as project
managers and hire a dozen or two locals as laborers. It
won’t be an easy task —everything from the cement mixing
to the digging is done by hand without power tools — but
the bigger challenge is working with the unknown. The
men don’t really know what to expect in terms of
materials and other details.
“We’ll be making things out of
nothing,” Shane says. In other words, improvise.
“That’s our job, to improvise,”
Mark confirms.
In addition to raising money for
their airfare and living expenses, their goal is to
raise $10,000 for materials, labor and other project
needs. Plummer’s business is a sponsor, along with other
businesses, friends and family. Burlingame hopes the
work will turn into ongoing support for the village.
“The need that you see when you
look at these kids is terrific — they get one meal a day
(a mix of cooked ground corn, millet and sorghum), and
they own nothing but the clothes on their backs,” he
says. “Once you go there, your life will never be the
same.”
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