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Grant Elementary
School at 2400 Downer Street in Richmond, CA has more than 800 students
and more than 80% of them are considered to be low or very low-income.
In 1999,
the North & East Neighborhood Council heard about "Shoes That Fit",
a national project (www.shoesthatfit.org)
and decided to launch it. Since then, residents, friends, local
groups, businesses and churches have contributed more than 1,000
pairs of shoes, either by purchasing them or donating money.
How it Works
The school identifies
youngsters, some of them homeless, who don't have shoes they can
wear to school or whose shoes don't fit. Neighborhood residents
buy shoes (and sometimes shirts) for the students. Those who buy
shoes drop them off at the Shoes That Fit Coordinator's home to
be delivered to the school. Others donate money and the coordinator
shops for them.
Call Lois Mignone at (510) 232-3910 for more information or let
her know which youngster you want to shop for.
Who Has Helped
In August, 2001, Michael J. of Security Pacific Real Estate issued
a challenge: if the N & E raised $1,000 for the Shoes Program
he would match it. In about two weeks checks totaling over $1,300
had arrived. Most of the $2,300 was spent in the fall of 2001,
making
it 469 pairs of shoes that were donated or purchased the first
three months of the school year..
The 3rd grade
Brownie Troop at Christ the King Catholic School in Pleasant Hill
thought Shoes That Fit would make a good community service project.
The troop sold Girl Scout cookies to raise part of the money. Then
each girl earned money through recycling, summer plant and animal
sitting, extra chores and saving their allowances. On November 5th,
with their troop leader Carol Young, and the Cadette Troop from
Christ the King, they came to Richmond to shop for the shoes, see
Grant School and turn in 18 pairs of shoes.
Alta Bates Hospital
nurse Cindy Grant and others at the hospitals Inpatient Service
have bought shoes several times, as have staff from Childrens
Hospital. Salomon Smith Barney in Berkeley has donated more than
50 pairs each December for the last two years. And a 13-year-old
girl in Montclair asked for shoes for her Bat Mitzvah and donated
them to Grant School and to two Shoes That Fit projects in Oakland.
Representatives
of the 10th grade class from Miramonte High School in Orinda delivered
52 pairs of shoes and socks to the Shoes That Fit program at Grant
Elementary School. The 300 students in the class saved their snack
money for the project.
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