Thats right this event is going to be huge, kids you need to bring food/money to skate $10 or 10 pounds of food gets you in for a 2 hour session on our newly built ramps and obstacles! All wood was donated by Pro Build and Big Creek Lumber (110 sheets of plywood, 300 2×4′s etc) orchestrated all by 3D Construction. The event will happen on October 30th at Twin Lakes Church parking lot from 10am to 4pm broken down into 3 groups:
10am to 12pm will be kids under 12 skating
12pm to 2pm will be kids under 14 skating
2pm to 4pm is open to all ages
Rotary Interact and Grind Out Hunger 1st Annual Skateathon!
There will be booths from local vendors and non profits participating to help feed children this holiday season. In addition there will be a raffle of skate goods, random local business prizes and the grand prize is a CAR!!! Raffle tickets will be sold the day of the event and through the Rotary Interact clubs. All poundage raised will count towards the school of your choice.
Okay barely two weeks in to the window for Grind Out Hunger and the youth of Santa Cruz County is taking this years goal of 250,000 pounds very seriously. Usually I would blog about each school, highlights…no such luck on this one! Schools are coming out swinging going for their own personal goals that are quickly coming into focus. Below are some points to take interest in…
Monterey Bay Academy and Grind Out Hunger
Monterey Bay Academy came out of the gate 1st again this year collecting almost 4000 pounds of food! I need to swing out there and get them motivated to keep going! These kids raised about the same amount last year and are very inspiring.
St Francis High School and Grind Out Hunger
Here comes St. Francis High School…John Marheineke is leading the youth to an amazing 8000 pound goal!!! This is the first year that St. Francis High has been in the mix…already breaking the donation station once, these kids are on fire and will easily hit their goal as they just passed the 5000 pound raised mark!!! YEWWWWWWWWWWW!
Santa Cruz County Fair and Grind Out Hunger
Santa Cruz County Fair President Michael Bethke gave us the green light and we took off with it! Posted up for two days during kids education days, Grind Out Hunger and The Santa Cruz County Fair brought in 3300 pounds for our efforts. Over 3500 3rd and 4th grade students rolled through and got to know all about Grind Out Hunger.
2010 is shaping up to be the year Grind Out Hunger shatters records to feed children. The youth of Santa Cruz County has grabbed it by the tail and will firmly own it I have no doubt. The competition window has just started and already Grind Out Hunger has over 12,000 pounds collected. Next few weeks we will be speaking at New Brighton Middle, Soquel High School, Santa Cruz High School, Shoreline Middle School, Scotts Valley High and many many more.
That 250,000 pound goal seems like it will be hit before Thanksgiving this year! If you want the Donation Station hit us up, we will bring it out to you!
The students of Santa Cruz County need your support. Buy the 2010 Grind Out Hunger Skateboard and 100% of proceeds are donated directly to Second Harvest Food Bank. Designed by Jimbo Phillips Graphix when you buy this board the school of your choice will receive a 300 pound credit towards winning the contest in Santa Cruz County. The elementary, middle and high school that collects the most pounds per student will receive gift certificates from Santa Cruz Skate and Surf Shop and SkateWorks Skate Shop totaling over $1800 this year! 250,000 pounds is the goal this year can you help?
SEPTEMBER 15TH & 16TH marks the Grind Out Hunger Annual Holiday Food Drive Kick-Off!
Grind Out Hunger is kicking off our annual food drive at the Santa Cruz County Fair during Education Days on the 15th and 16th. We will be teaming up with Elementary schools all across Santa Cruz County to fill a customized, Plexiglas half-pipe FULL of non-perishable food items in an effort to get food into the homes of families all across Santa Cruz County.
Since 2004 Grind Out Hunger has partnered up with Elementary, Middle, and High schools all over Santa Cruz County to get the student body involved with their schools Holiday Food Drive. Last year Grind Out Hunger infiltrated 30 Santa Cruz county schools to raise over 130,000 pounds of food, and for 2010 we are aiming high and looking to double those numbers at 250,000 pound goal.
On the 15th and 16th we will be keeping track of every pound of food donated by participating schools. Those numbers will be consolidated into each schools overall Holiday Food Drive donations, as well as Grind Out Hunger’s overall numbers for 2010. Participating in the Grind Out Hunger Kick-Off is an easy way to get started early on boosting your school’s annual Holiday Food Drive numbers!
Last year Gateway Elementary School raised 6,403 pounds of food for the Santa Cruz community. Along with the honor and recognition that came along with being the elementary school that raised the most pounds of food per student in Santa Cruz county, Gateway Elementary also won a Grind Out Hunger gift package. The 2010 Grind Out Hunger winner will receive gift certificates to Santa Cruz Skate and Surf Shop and SkateWorks Skate Shop, a Jimbo Phillips customized Grind Out Hunger Skate Deck Trophy and countywide recognition at Second Harvest Food Banks annual awards dinner.
Come out and kick off your school’s annual Holiday Food Drive with us at Santa Cruz County Fair! We’re looking forward to working with you!
Sincerely,
Danny Keith
Grind Out Hunger Founder
For more information and details around the Grind Out Hunger food drive go to www.grindouthunger.org or contact:
2010 Grind Out Hunger Skateboard by Jimbo Phillips
These skateboards will land right before the kick off at The Santa Cruz County Fair on September 15th 2010!!! Schools will be vying to receive one of these as a trophy for the most pounds of food raised! Stay tuned for more news!! Skateboard graphic graciously donated by Jimbo Phillips.
Some would say he’s “very Santa Cruz.” But he’s also very cool and boy, is he eager to get kids to know about hunger — and how they can combat it.
Meet Danny Keith, a Northern California guy hungry to make a change.
Keith, who lives and breathes the surf and skate culture in Santa Cruz, California, has been at the helm of Santa Cruz Skate and Surf Shop since the early ’90s. In fact, he’s created a wildly inventive setting in his fascinating little lair. A pool table, some video games and a TV lounge compete with the other eye candy in the shop — all that skate and surf paraphernalia. Think of it as post-modern after-school club for today’s youth.
But beyond that arena, Keith’s been happily riding another successful wave. It’s a philanthropic one dubbed Grind Out Hunger, which the 40-year-old launched back in 2004 after teaming with Santa Cruz’s Second Harvest Food Bank. The idea was to speak to kids at local schools and “encourage youth in helping peers” with the issue of hunger.
How Keith arrived at that point is interesting to chronicle. After receiving several food barrels from Second Harvest, he noticed that the barrels weren’t being filled up.
“We came to realize that moms weren’t traveling around with five pounds of food they can donate when their kids wanted to buy a skateboard,” Keith tells me. “Typically there would be 20 to 30 kids hanging out, playing pool, playing video games [in the shop] — they’re not walking around with cans of food in their pocket. So, I thought, if I can’t get them to bring in the food, then I’ll bring it to them.”
In a stellar move, Keith decided to hit local elementary, middle and high schools during their traditional holiday food drives. An easy thing to do would have been to simply drop off some food barrels, but Keith went one step further. He decided to actually talk to the students himself. And so, in a series of spirited discussions during assemblies, he began educating students about the importance of thwarting hunger in Santa Cruz County.
“I also wanted to create incentives for schools to raise the most pounds per student,” Keith adds. “I wanted to reward that [winning] school with a gift certificate, which they could give to winning students however they saw fit.”
In the beginning, the idea sparked the interests of smaller niches — the AP Club, the school band and the like.
“Only about five percent of the school was involved and I saw that there needed to be a wide-spread peer pressure effect,” Keith says. So he tossed in a prize of $600. Instantly, student interest surpassed just the AP club, to include the entire school.
Over the course of five years, Keith’s motivational work with students and their posses has lured in hundreds of thousands of pounds of food. Last year’s total: 100,000 pounds, more than double the amount at the beginning of the mission.
But you’d really have to witness the Keith’s amazing vigor in person to know just how infectious his personality is. His look is modern skate-surf. He appears carefree in sneakers but is insanely focused, creative and passionate about giving back — his shoulder-length brown hair, for instance, is about to be chopped off for Locks of Love, which provides real-hair wigs for those suffering from cancer. He now boasts more than 20 speaking engagements a year at local schools. Last year, he nabbed the Generation Next Award from Second Harvest.
Asked why he’s so passionate about combating hunger, Keith sighs deeply and says that it has a great deal to with kids and the elderly.
“They are the two groups of people that really can’t really make a change happen [in regards to not having food],” he says. “I think there is a misnomer of who gets fed by food banks. A lot of people think it’s mainly going to homeless shelters and people not pulling their weight, and that’s not really the case. Second Harvest services forty-thousand-plus people a month. Half of those are kids!
“And it’s not like going to Safeway Foods where you can pick out the food you want,” he adds. “You go there and you are handed a bag. It’s a very humbling experience. For me, I never went hungry growing up, but we were strapped as a family. Both my parents were injured and there were times when we’d eat a lot of hot dogs and beans — whatever, we were still eating, but I thoroughly believe that if we fed people and educated them, we’d have a better society and spend less money incarcerating people and trying to rehabilitate them.”
Keith is a Salinas native who fell in love with surfing at an early age. He relocated to Santa Cruz in his late teens, now has three children, 18, 16 and an 18-month old. He believes in “paying it forward” because “you never know where you are going to be.”
Up next for this hunger fighter: An inventive re-teaming with Second Harvest on “packaging” the model he uses when speaking to kids, which would allow other food banks to utilize his program through media kits and DVDs. He also sees the importance of being a social networking titan.
Other than his ties at Santa Cruz Skate and Surf, he oversees other enterprises, such as skateboards.com, surfboards.com and snowboards.com. He’s also a morning on-air personality (6 to 11 a.m.) on KDON’s rambunctious “Morning Madhouse” — you can often spot the man at a bevy of local events the station covers, too.
All this exposure, Keith notes, only helps him get the word out about hunger issues in the 831.
“There’s no reason anybody in this country should go hungry — period!”
Watch the video (below) of the First Annual Nexties, of which Keith was a recipient, at a recent awards ceremony sponsored by local giant Santa Cruz Next.