Purpose
The Bridging Horizons Community Service Contest provides a community-oriented service experience that gives groups the opportunity to make a positive impact by helping community members overcome physical barriers. Each entrant completes a project in their community that helps to enhance independence for a person (or people) with a disability.
Download the Bridging Horizons Community Service Contest brochure
Eligibility
Both youth and adult service organizations are eligible, such as FFA Chapters, 4-H Clubs, Jr. Leaders, Boy Scouts/Girl Scouts, Young Farmers, Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions, volunteer fire departments, church groups, etc. While special priority will be given to projects completed in rural areas or small towns, projects will be accepted from any area.
Deadline
Applications must be received by AgrAbility by APRIL 30.
Prizes
For the 2025-26 contest, the first, second, and third place winners receive cash prizes of $500, $250, and $100 respectively.
Entry Form
Click here to access the online entry form. NOTE: this form requires a Google account; if you do not have one, contact info@IndianaAgrAbility.org for an alternate entry method.
50 Project Ideas for the Bridging Horizons Contest
The following are some ideas that might help your organization get started on a project for the Bridging Horizons Contest. You could begin by looking around your community for possible ideas. We suggest that you keep it simple and have fun. Many of these projects would only take an afternoon or two to complete, but can have a long-lasting positive effect on your community. Click on the links for project idea photos.
- Install Rearview Mirrors. Install rearview mirrors on agricultural equipment so that an individual with a bad back will not have to twist as much when backing up.
- Fabricate a Rolling Cart. Design a cart that can be scooted through a garden or around a shop for people who have trouble walking. The Tippecanoe Valley FFA Chapter designed a shop chair for a farmer who could stand for extended periods of time.
- Construct Raised Bed Gardens. Build raised garden beds for a community garden or health-care facility so that those with mobility impairments can access them.
- Distribute Helpful Publications. Provide publications, like AgrAbility resources, to members of your community to help with issues like arthritis, back problems, or shop accessibility.
- Conduct a Community Assessment. Go out into your community and do a community or worksite assessment on accessibility. Do the police station, hospital, public fishing sites, or local parks have ramps, an accessible parking spot, a clearly posted sign pointing to an accessible entrance, accessible restrooms, a compacted walkway that a wheelchair could roll on and other features that ensure access? If not, follow up with a written proposal to your county officials reporting what you have found, possible changes that need to be made, why the changes need to be made, and whom to contact to make the changes. If you believe that your organization could assist in accomplishing some of the needed changes, offer to help.
- Mark Accessible Parking Spaces. Get some blue paint and refresh or make new accessible parking spaces at your high school, baseball diamond, tennis courts, local businesses, etc. (Become the "Blue Crew").
- Fabricate Stencils. Develop a stencil for marking accessible parking areas, and distribute it to local businesses.
- Purchase and Install Accessible Signs. Buy and install signs at appropriate locations in the community. These signs can be purchased at hardware stores and other places such as Lowe's, Wal-Mart, etc., along with stakes or poles. Always ask permission before installing signs.
- Make a Farm Plot Accessible. Is your school's farm plot accessible? Clear a pathway, build a bridge over the ditch, remove big rocks and twigs, mow some of the tall weeds, compact soil, or make a walkway out of crushed limestone, woodchips, etc., so that a wheelchair or those with mobility impairments can maneuver more easily.
- Enhancing School Accessibility. Look around your school. Is there an accessible picnic table? Is there a desk in your classroom that is wheelchair friendly? Can a wheelchair get into the football stands? Are there curb cuts? Should there be more? Are they in the right places? In the auditorium, is there a spot for a wheelchair?
- Conduct a Social Media Campaign. Use your favorite social media platforms to promote inclusion of people with disabilities. This is a good activity during National Disability Employment Awareness Month.
- Wheelchair Wheel Cleaner. Make a brush that cleans wheelchair tires, similar to what you would use to clean your boots.
- Self-Loading Trailer. Construct a trailer that self-loads and unloads an ATV, lawnmower, etc., for an individual who may have trouble getting on and off of his or her equipment.
- Extra Step on Equipment. Add an extra step to an older farmer's tractor or combine to make mounting his or her equipment less of an effort. 1, 2, 3
- Fabricate Simple Hand Controls. Build hand controls to operate a tractor's clutch pedal or brake for an individual with limited leg strength.
- One-Handed Tools. Design shovel or other tool handles that make the tool usable with one hand.
- Assist with Organization of Farm Shop. Organize a farmer's shop so that tools are easily accessible.
- Fabricate a Wheelchair Ramp. Design and build portable wheelchair ramps that can be easily transported in a van or car for an individual in a wheelchair.
- Make Nursing Home Improvements. Spend a day at a local nursing home planting flowers, installing a bird viewing area, or making general improvements for the residents.
- ATV Modifications. Install foot guards, heat shields and a hand shifter on an ATV for an individual with limited sensation in his or her lower limbs.
- Self-Attaching Hitch. Install a self-attaching tongue hitch on a trailer, so that an individual with limited mobility won't have to get out of his or her vehicle when hooking onto a trailer. 1, 2.
- Accessible Fishing Area. Build an accessible fishing pier or provide fishing rod holders for a public lake or community pond.
- Self-Opening Gate. Install a self-opening cattle gate so that an individual with limited mobility won't have to dismount their equipment to open and close the gate.
- Installing Ramps and Curb Cuts. Identify areas where wheelchair ramps and curb cuts need to be installed. Make the necessary changes so that an individual in a wheelchair can get into a building or onto a sidewalk. The North Miami FFA chapter built a wheelchair ramp for a chapter member.
- Helping Local Citizens. Identify an individual who could benefit from assistance in snow removal or spring landscaping.
- On-Site Assistance. Spend a day at a farm repairing and cleaning for a local resident with arthritis who may have trouble getting around.
- Accessible Welding Table. Design a welding table that a wheelchair can fit beneath. Additionally, install a shield to deflect sparks away from an individual's legs. Some individuals have limited sensation and may not know if they are being burned.
- Extended Tree Planter. Make an extended hand-held tree planter for people who have trouble bending.
- Tool Location System. Develop a tool location system in a shop for a visually-impaired person.
- Braille. Put braille labels on tools, switches and signs for a visually impaired individual.
- Accessible Flowerpot. Build a bird feeder or flowerpot that can be raised, lowered and filled by a person in a wheelchair.
- Improving Outside Accessibility. Do a landscaping project for a family that would enhance outside accessibility. Grade and level a pathway around a garden or to a mailbox that is free of holes and rocks, and has a slope that is tolerable to maneuver by wheelchair users.
- Host a Support Group. Host a support group or hold a special event, such as a picnic, for farmers with disabilities within your community.
- Mount a Gun Support onto a Wheelchair. Design and mount a gun support system onto a wheelchair.
- Accessible Picnic Table. Design an accessible picnic table for a local park in your community.
- Accessible Walkways. Widen doorways or alleyways at local businesses or fairgrounds so that a wheelchair can fit through them. The Tri-County FFA chapter built an accessible walkway at their show arena.
- Install Automatic Door Openers. Install automatic door openers for a local farmer, at your school, or for a local business.
- Install Easy-to-Turn Handles. Install lever-type handles for a person with limited arm and finger strength.
- Prosthetic Limb Modifications. Make tools that can be attached to a prosthetic arm.
- Host Physically-Challenged Athletic Events. Host a wheelchair basketball game to increase public awareness.
- Install Hydraulic Couplers. Install hydraulic couplers on agricultural equipment so that hydraulic lines can be put on and off with less effort.
- Install Steering Wheel Knobs or Rings. Install steering rings to assist an amputee with driving equipment.
- Install Wind Chimes. Install wind chimes in different locations on a farm to assist visually-impaired individuals in getting around by hearing the chimes.
- Accessible Fire Extinguishers. Design a fire extinguisher that can be operated with one hand for an amputee.
- Install Guidance Ropes. Install a guidance rope that is placed on the floor to help guide the visually-impaired around a shop. 1.
- Make Modifications to a Fishing Boat. Install hand controls on a fishing boat that operate a trolling motor for an individual who doesn't have the use of his or her legs.
- Design an Accessible Hunting Blind. Make an accessible hunting blind for an individual in a wheelchair.
- Fabricate an Easy-Feeding System. Build a swing-out-door feeding system so that an individual won't have to climb into a pen to fill buckets.
- Install Swivel Seats. Design and install a swivel seat on equipment for those who have trouble twisting.
- Make an Easy-to-Fill Planter. Mount an auger on a planter so that seed and fertilizer can be filled without having to lift heavy bags.