City Council President Pete Madden, far left, reads a proclamation honoring Chase for this high achievement.
By MADDY VITALE
City Council President Pete Madden reads a proclamation, while other members of Council join in the ceremony honoring Chase Palermo for his high achievement.
Chase, who attends ODOSY School in Rio Grande, had to determine the best type of garden and the suitable materials to sustain it in a flood-prone area.
“The place he chose is a lot that has always been empty. It is on 34th Street behind the Acme,” Andrea Palermo explained. “But there wasn’t a lot you could do there. But he wanted to do something for Merion Park. His first thought was planting a garden. He started researching what to do in areas of flood and came up with a rock garden.”
But that wasn’t all that Chase did.
He got in touch with people from a social media group known for creating beautifully painted rocks that they leave about town to spread a bit of joy.
“He reached out to OCNJ Rocks on Facebook. The woman who runs it, helped out and painted rocks and the neighborhood kids helped out, too,” Andrea Palermo said. “It was wonderful.”
“The whole experience was awesome. It was just wonderful walking in the Council Chambers. People kept congratulating him,” his mother said in an interview Sunday. “For a kid to be recognized by adults for doing a great thing was really nice.”
Chase and his family are still working out the details of when he will have his official Eagle Scout ceremony.
For now, he is just happy to have achieved the honor and is looking forward to his next adventure, only this time as an Eagle.
Andrea Palermo said watching her son achieve such a prestigious honor was one of her “proudest moments.”
Chase's father was equally proud and Andrea Palermo noted that his father has served "as a guiding light."
“It was one of the best experiences as a mother to see that he could put things together and succeed in doing something that so few people can do,” she said. “Finishing this gave him so much confidence.”