Local business man Mike Berry is constantly smiling
when talking about his second job, a volunteer occupation, overseeing Kids Aid,
a non-profit organization in Mesa County.
Few people recognize that particular title; they
just know about the “Backpack program,” where hungry students are provided with
backpacks of food donations, so that they would have food over the weekend.
Even fewer people realize that this nine-year-old
program was started by a family meeting around the Berry’s dinning room table.
He explained, “One October morning in 2003, my wife
and I had walked our daughter to her 1st grade class. . .when a
little girl came running across the playground, crying. We stopped her and
asked what was wrong. Her answer pierced our hearts.
“I’m cold. I’m hungry. . . “
This one little girl’s plea touched Mike, wife
Debbie and their son and daughter’s hearts, but how could they help?
After four years of researching and questioning
about childhood hunger in Mesa County, the Berry family came up with a plan.
Their daughter Kayla named it, the Feeding Friends Backpack program.
Mike and Debbie established the non-profit Kids Aid
to run it.
And how it has grown.
They started with a trial program at Orchard Avenue
Elementary. We fed 10 kids for the final 10 weeks of the 2007-2008 school year.
By the next fall we had five schools and 156 kids,
This simple but revolutionary plan has grown into a
hometown organization of award-winning proportions.
What started as a way to help hungry children in our
local schools is now a Nationally recognized non-profit organization run by
volunteers by individual and business donations of food, equipment and money.
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