Caring for the Kenai winner Carlee Rizzo, a junior from Nikiski High School, took this year’s top prize with her project, a video game aimed at teaching elementary students that they can make a difference. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

Caring for the Kenai winner Carlee Rizzo, a junior from Nikiski High School, took this year’s top prize with her project, a video game aimed at teaching elementary students that they can make a difference. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

Rizzo brings home Caring for the Kenai

  • By KAT SORENSEN
  • Saturday, April 21, 2018 9:31pm
  • News

Whoever said video games are bad for kids hasn’t met Carlee Rizzo, whose winning Caring for the Kenai project turns that notion on its head.

The Caring for the Kenai contest challenges and educates high school students across the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District to make an environmental difference or prepare the community for a natural disaster, and this year’s winner exemplifies the environmental mission by teaching the younger generation that it’s never too late.

Rizzo, a Nikiski High School junior, took home top prize at the 28th annual event, held Thursday night at Kenai Central High School’s Little Theatre, with a video game and interactive presentation aimed to teach elementary school students that they can counteract bad choices made by others that harm their environment.

“I always knew that I wanted to work with the younger generation because that’s where I feel like most of our future is going to depend on,” Rizzo said. “I like talking to the elementary school kids to get in there and talk to the kids and see if I can inspire someone to make a difference.”

Rizzo’s idea extends the goals of Caring for the Kenai to the digital world through video games and the classroom’s interactive smart boards. Elementary students are tasked with finding solutions to environmental issues. Rizzo has brought her game to classrooms, and said the students really enjoy it.

“If you ask any kid what they want to do, they will probably say play a game,” she said. “They are responding really well. Throughout the entire time that I was there I was using cards, but then halfway through I didn’t need the cards anymore because the kids were coming up with their own solutions.”

Rizzo said her next step is finding a video game engineer to improve and grow her game.

“I want to get more development from someone who really knows video games,” Rizzo said. “It’s about finding someone who will volunteer.”

Two Soldotna Prep freshman finished out the top three. Erika Arthur took second place with a self-watering lettuce tower that she hopes to install in district schools, starting with Redoubt Elementary School, to reduce the community’s dependence on imported foods.

“It will be inexpensive, easy to build and students will be able to have fresh lettuce for their salad instead of chemically treated imported lettuce,” Arthur wrote in her proposal.

Arthur said she’s also interested in bringing her project to local farmer’s markets.

Ryder Giesler took third place with a project that has already come to fruition; now it’s just about reinforcing good practices, he said. Giesler’s proposal, written in November, included the goal of a plastic bag ban, which actually became a reality in Soldotna earlier this month when the city council voted to enact one.

“I do a lot of outdoor activities,” he said. “I get sick and tired of seeing these plastic bags and litter around when I’m doing these activities.”

With the ban taking effect Nov. 1, Giesler said, his main objective is to make sure people remember their reusable bags. He’s planning on spending his Sunday, which is Earth Day, handing out reusable bags to shoppers throughout Soldotna.

He also said he’ll use some of his prize money to buy more reusable bags.

“I’m so happy, I met my goal and I’m in the top three,” Giesler said. “It feels awesome.”

The top three projects were chosen from a group of 12 finalists who gave presentations on Thursday night. Fourth place went to Kenai Central High School freshman Marek Grieme. Daisy Kettle, a sophomore from Homer High School, took fifth. Riley Graves, a Kenai Central High School freshman, won sixth place. Other finalists included Mya Betts, Hunter Warren and Colby Marion of Homer High School, Christian Kuczmarski and Parker Kincaid from Soldotna Prep and Emma Mullet and Vanessa Beck of Kenai Central High School. Tthe 12 finalists were chosen from a pool of nearly 400 proposals from across the school district.

The finalists received a cash prizes, ranging from $1,600 to $400 and their school’s science departments will receive a total of $20,000, sponsored by Andeavor and community partners including Kenai River Raven Lodge, Hilcorp Energy, Peninsula Community Health Services, ConocoPhillips, Sweeney’s Clothing and Peninsula Radiation Oncology Center.

The presentations were judged by a group of community members including Kenai Peninsula Borough Mayor Charlie Pierce, Assistant Superintendent John O’Brien, Cameron Hunt of Andeavor, Tim Dillon of the Kenai Peninsula Economic Development District and Challenger Learning Center of Alaska, Dick Erkeneff of Kenai River Raven Lodge, Jade Gamble from the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation and last year’s Caring for the Kenai winner, Anya Hondel.

“I didn’t really get the opportunity to experience the different presentations last year,” Hondel said. “This is very awe-inspiring — I was very impressed.”

Reach Kat Sorensen at ksorensen@peninsulaclarion.com.

Soldotna Prep freshman Erika Arthur, from left, Nikiski High School junior Carlee Rizzo and Soldotna Prep freshman Ryder Giesler made the top three out of nearly 400 proposals in this year’s Caring for the Kenai competition. Rizzo won first prize, Arthur took second and Giesler won third. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

Soldotna Prep freshman Erika Arthur, from left, Nikiski High School junior Carlee Rizzo and Soldotna Prep freshman Ryder Giesler made the top three out of nearly 400 proposals in this year’s Caring for the Kenai competition. Rizzo won first prize, Arthur took second and Giesler won third. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

Anya Hondel, the 2017 winner of Caring for the Kenai, participates in this year’s judging for the contest’s annual oral presentations Thursday at Kenai Central High School. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

Anya Hondel, the 2017 winner of Caring for the Kenai, participates in this year’s judging for the contest’s annual oral presentations Thursday at Kenai Central High School. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

Rizzo brings home Caring for the Kenai

Anya Hondel, the 2017 winner of Caring for the Kenai, participates in this year’s judging for the contest’s annual oral presentations Thursday at Kenai Central High School. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

Rizzo brings home Caring for the Kenai

Anya Hondel, the 2017 winner of Caring for the Kenai, participates in this year’s judging for the contest’s annual oral presentations Thursday at Kenai Central High School. (Photo by Kat Sorensen/Peninsula Clarion)

More in News

Downed trees are seen in the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge in September 2020. (Photo by Erin Thompson/Peninsula Clarion)
Refuge opens for firewood collection Tuesday

Only trees that are dead and down within designated areas may be cut

Metal reinforcements line the front of the Kenai Bluff at North Kenai Beach, Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, in Kenai, Alaska. (Photo by Erin Thompson/Peninsula Clarion)
Construction of expanded seawall underway at Kenai Beach

The work is being undertaken by a group of property owners, with blessing from the City of Kenai

Soldotna City Clerk Johni Blankenship, right, administers oaths of office to Linda Farnsworth-Hutchings and Jordan Chilson during a meeting of the Soldotna City Council in Soldotna, Alaska, on Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Soldotna certifies election results

Linda Farnsworth-Hutchings and Jordan Chilson reelected to city council

A voter fills out their ballot at the Kenai No. 2 Precinct in the Challenger Learning Center of Alaska in Kenai, Alaska, on Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Campaign spending picks up ahead of general election

Electoral candidates were required to file disclosure forms 30 days before the election

tease
Lord wins mayor’s race

The Election Canvass Board certified City of Homer election results on Friday

Sockeye salmon caught in a set gillnet are dragged up onto the beach at a test site for selective harvest setnet gear in Kenai, Alaska, on Tuesday, July 25, 2023. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Spend plan moves forward for 2021 and 2022 setnet fishery disasters

The National Marine Fisheries Service in June allocated $11,484,675 to address losses from the 2021 and 2022 fisheries

Borough Clerk Michele Turner administers oaths of office to Cindy Ecklund and James Baisden during a meeting of the Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly in Soldotna, Alaska, on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024. Ecklund was reelected and Baisden was elected to the assembly during the Oct. 1 election. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Borough assembly certifies election; Baisden and Ecklund are sworn in

Cindy Ecklund won reelection; James Baisden was newly elected

Well over 50 people enjoy the Nikiski Pool during a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the North Peninsula Recreation Service Area in Nikiski, Alaska, on Saturday, Aug. 3, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Assembly adds funds to project to replace Nikiski Pool water line

Increased complexities stem from a lack of information about how the pool’s water systems are put together

Alaska State Sen. Jesse Bjorkman (R-Nikiski), left, and Alaska House Rep. Ben Carpenter (R-Nikiski) participate in the Senate District D candidate forum hosted by the Peninsula Clarion and KDLL 91.9 FM on Monday, Oct. 7, 2024, at the Soldotna Public Library in Soldotna, Alaska. (Photo by Erin Thompson/Peninsula Clarion)
Bjorkman, Carpenter talk economy, energy, education at forum

Whoever is elected to the seat will serve a four-year term ending in January 2029

Most Read