
October 10, 2006

Hundreds of St. Paul children – many from countries scattered across the globe –have benefited from the clothing drive in the two years since the campaign’s inception. Since many of their parents do not qualify for public assistance, resources can be difficult to find. Becky, who teaches at Jackson Elementary School in St. Paul, got the idea for a used winter clothing bank after watching in dismay as the youngsters came to school without jackets, sweaters or even mittens – even as temperatures plummeted below freezing. “She called me up and said, ‘Mom, I need your help,’” Dianne recalls.
Dianne posted a sign in her workplace requesting donations. “That’s all it took,” she said. Bags of items soon began piling up in her home. “I had a bedroom filled, and a laundry room,” she said.
By the second year of their effort, students at seven schools had winter clothes.
“We’re not doing this for an award,” adds Dianne. “We’re doing this because these kids need to be warm. It’s very hard to accept something like that [the award] when you’re just doing something anyone would do. But it was a huge honor – very humbling. It is the kindness of many people that make this possible. We are just the ‘middle