Northern Kentucky Harvest ninth annual Backpacks and Breakfast event on
Saturday will provide backpacks loaded with school supplies for
children from poor families. (Getty Image)
Northern Kentucky students from low-income families can prepare for the
new school year through one of the area's largest backpack and school
supply giveaways.
Organizers plan to give away a record 860 backpacks stuffed with
school supplies at the ninth annual Backpacks and Breakfast Saturday
morning in Covington's Goebel Park. The event is open to students in
kindergarten through grade 12 from low-income families in Boone, Kenton
and Campbell counties.
Parents should
bring a photo ID for themselves, medical cards or Social Security cards
for their children and a piece of mail with their current address.
Besides
the backpack giveaway, participants can enjoy free breakfast from
Frisch's restaurant and Trauth Dairy and free pony rides from the
Covington Recreation Commission.
The
primary sponsor is Northern Kentucky Harvest, a non-profit,
all-volunteer organization founded in 1999 that provides food, clothing
and school supplies to low-income residents of Boone, Kenton and
Campbell counties.
"Last
year, we gave away 716 backpacks and that was the first year we ever
ran out, so this year we've increased the number of backpacks
substantially," said Paul Gottbrath, president of Northern Kentucky
Harvest.
In 2001,
Northern Kentucky Harvest started the program when volunteers bought
150 backpacks, stuffed them with school supplies, and spread the word
that they'd be given away in Goebel Park on a Saturday morning.
"The
event takes place rain or shine," Gottbrath said. "Four years ago,
families representing more than 400 kids turned out in a driving rain."
Gottbrath
said many of the families served by Backpacks and Breakfast are faced
with a choice of purchasing school supplies or letting basic needs
slide.
To keep up
with the demand, Northern Kentucky Harvest has partnered with
organizations such as the Robert M. Butler Foundation, which has been a
major underwriter of the event for the past two years. Other partners
are Frisch's, Trauth Dairy, Be Concerned, Brighton Center, and Henry
Hosea House, the Summertime Kids program, the Helen Steiner Rice Fund
of the Greater Cincinnati Foundation, the Diocese of Covington,
Immanuel United Methodist Church and its vacation Bible school, St.
Joseph Church in Cold Spring and St. Timothy Catholic Church and
Lakeside Christian Church.