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Student enrollment for this years 4-H season kicks off

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Many youth in Trinity County partake of the benefits of 4-H, which starts a new year of events this month. Courtesy photoMany youth in Trinity County partake of the benefits of 4-H, which starts a new year of events this month. Courtesy photo

Special to the News-Standard

The 2023-2024 4-H year officially kicked off Sept. 1, with early enrollment beginning Aug. 15.

Trinity 4-H of the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service is excited to welcome new and returning members to another year of 4-H programming and opportunity.

This organization is a club for youth ages 8 to 18 in grades 3 through 12. All youth can join 4-H for $25 each and will select one or many projects to participate in from the categories of agriculture and livestock, family and community health, leadership and citizenship, natural resources, and STEM.

Community service, leadership, and scholarship opportunities are also included in the offerings of this program that reaches more than 550,000 youth in Texas each year.

“The start of the new 4-H year is such an exciting time in our program,” Texas 4-H Youth Development Program Director Dr. Montza Williams said. “We hope to see members take advantage of every opportunity that 4-H has to offer this year, and we hope to see new members begin their journey in this life-changing program.”

Not only do youth gain knowledge in the topic area of their choice, but life skills like communication, teamwork, citizenship, giving back, and working hard are obtained along every step of the way.

“According to past members, one of the most common 4-H benefits is friendship,” Williams said. “Friendship in your county, your district, your state, and even your nation. 4-H is rich in the opportunity to make friends who are interested in the same things you are.”

The new 4-H year is not only exciting for members, but for 4-H volunteers as well. The Texas 4-H program thrives on adult volunteers, with more than 30,000 registered and background-check-approved volunteers, annually.

“The volunteers are what make this program accessible to all youth,” Dr. Williams said. “We are incredibly thankful for the work our volunteers do across the state and encourage adults that have a skill to share to reach out to their County Extension Office about becoming a 4-H volunteer.”

The Trinity AgriLife Extension Office, or Stacye Tullos, County Extension Agent, can be located at 223 W. First St. in Groveton, via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or by phone at (936) 642-1421.

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