
Eagle Scout Wins $3,000 for Emergency Classroom Kits
A Massachusetts high school senior who placed emergency preparedness buckets in every classroom earned a new statewide leadership award. Gavin Tramontozzi's Eagle Scout project and years of service just won him recognition and $3,000 for college.
When Medway High School senior Gavin Tramontozzi became an Eagle Scout, he didn't just earn a badge. He made sure every classroom in his town had emergency supplies ready when students need them most.
That dedication just earned him something special: the first-ever Massachusetts Association of School Superintendents Senior Student Leadership and Scholarship Award, worth $3,000. The new statewide honor celebrates high schoolers who combine academic effort with genuine leadership and character.
Tramontozzi's Eagle Scout project tackled a real need. He organized the delivery of emergency preparedness buckets to every Medway classroom, stocking them with critical supplies for emergencies or lockdowns. Each bucket now sits ready to help students and teachers in moments that matter.
But the emergency kits tell only part of his story. As president of both the National Honor Society and the Leo Club, Tramontozzi leads multiple student groups. He also serves as an officer in the Peer Counseling program, where he mentors freshmen and new students navigating high school for the first time.
His service reaches beyond school hallways. Tramontozzi volunteers regularly at the local food pantry and participates in town cleanups. He supports peers academically, showing up wherever help is needed.

Superintendent Armand Pires, who selected Tramontozzi for the award, presented it during a recent school committee meeting. "Gavin is a dedicated, service-oriented student whose leadership and character have made a meaningful and lasting impact on the Medway Public Schools community," Pires said.
Why This Inspires
Tramontozzi represents a generation stepping up without waiting for permission. While many teenagers focus inward during their senior year, he looked around his community and asked what needed doing. Then he did it.
His approach shows how one person's initiative creates lasting safety and support systems. Those emergency buckets will serve Medway students for years, long after Tramontozzi walks across the graduation stage. The freshmen he mentors will remember someone cared enough to guide them through tough transitions.
The new scholarship program itself reflects growing recognition that character matters as much as test scores. By honoring students like Tramontozzi, Massachusetts schools are telling young people: your service counts, your leadership matters, and your community sees you.
Sometimes the biggest impact comes from noticing what's missing and filling that gap yourself.
Based on reporting by Google News - Scholarship Awarded
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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