Each week, we’d like to highlight a different cause that is in need.
COLORADO, USA — We offer up a “Word of Thanks” every week during Next with Kyle Clark – it’s a chance to highlight small and medium non-profits doing crucial work in Colorado.
The routine is simple. Each week, Kyle presents a new organization he’d like to highlight and asks you to consider just a $5 donation. He won’t share any cause that he won’t donate to himself and will match the first fifty donations of $5 every time.
We will share the causes within this article every week.
If you are not able to give but want to support the effort, please consider sharing this link with others who may feel encouraged to donate. Thank you all for your consideration and generosity!
For those keeping track, we have raised more than $4 million together since June 2020! Below is a list of the non-profits we have highlighted in 2021 so far. To see the groups we highlighted in 2020, click here.
RELATED: ‘Word of Thanks’ nonprofits highlighted by Next with Kyle Clark in 2020
6/30/21: Celebrate EDU
When we talk about unemployment, the conversation rarely focuses on Coloradans with developmental disabilities, yet their unemployment rate is incredibly high.
Nationwide, before the pandemic, four in five Americans with developmental disabilities were unemployed. In Colorado, there’s a local non-profit with an innovative idea to help people reach their potential.
Our Word of Thanks micro-giving campaign this week supports Celebrate EDU, based in Boulder County.
That non-profit provides job skills, as well business and entrepreneurial training for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. This allows them to turn their passions into small businesses, or hone their skills so they can join the workforce to find purpose and the community that comes with work.
Celebrate EDU’s students have started a baking business, an online clothing boutique, a podcast and even bilingual instructional videos for other young people with autism.
This small non-profit is looking to expand its work to reach more people with intellectual or developmental disabilities, and also scale up its micro-grant program so that students with strong business plans can get a little seed money to start up their idea.
A little boost from a bunch of us will help more Coloradans achieve their dream of starting a small business and finding purpose through work. As always, we ask you to consider a $5 donation. Kyle will match the first 50 of those.
If you’re interested in giving, you can donate here.
6/23/21 | Arvada Healing Fund: So many of you have asked how to help those hurting in Arvada since the Olde Town Shooting earlier this week. While the family of Johnny Hurley has decided to go with GoFundMe, a for-profit fundraising business, there are non-profit organizations that can get donations to victims, as well.
Your Word of Thanks micro-giving campaign this week supports the Arvada Healing Fund, created specifically for Next viewers.
Every dollar donated will be split between the Colorado Fallen Hero Foundation, which is supporting the family of fallen Officer Gordon Beesley, and the Colorado Organization for Victim Assistance, which is meeting the needs of other survivors and witnesses.
Community First Foundation set up the fund. They aren’t taking a dollar and they will also cover credit card processing fees.
Officer Beesley’s family has requested privacy, but we know from friends that he left behind a wife and kids. The Colorado Fallen Hero Foundation says every dollar it collects for them will go directly to the Beesley family.
The Colorado Organization for Victim Assistance (COVA) is a group we’ve talked about before. They can help with the needs of other survivors who were close to the shooting and impacted in various ways. That does include the family of Johnny Hurley if they’re interested in that assistance.
Just like every week with every Word of Thanks cause, we ask you to consider even just a $5 donation. Kyle will match the first 50 of those.
If you’re interested in giving, you can donate here.
UPDATE: We raised more than $31,900!
6/16/21 | Soccer Without Borders: It’s never easy being the new kid, let alone the new kid in a new country.
Soccer Without Borders is a non-profit in Colorado that uses the uniting power of sports to encourage kids and make them feel welcome as they get used to life here. They do this with their youth soccer program for young people — refugees and immigrants — who are new to Colorado.
As these kids play a sport they know and love, they can learn English at the same time. This soccer program also serves as a way to connect those kids and their families to the support systems they need to get off to a successful start in Colorado. That could be anything from career guidance to finding a place to live, or language tutoring for adults.
Their young participants have come to Colorado from 24 counties, speaking 16 different languages.
Soccer Without Borders has been around for a decade and is expanding its work to more communities from Weld County to the Denver Metro Area. We raised more than $19,000 to help them do that.
If you’re interested in giving, you can donate here.
6/9/21 | Robbie’s Hope: Children’s Hospital Colorado announced a “pediatric mental health state of emergency” when they started seeing twice as many young people with anxiety and depression than before the pandemic.
Robbie’s Hope is a non-profit named for Robbie Eckert, a 15-year-old in Lakewood who took his own life in 2018. His parents started the organization so that they might save lives. The “Hope” stands for “Hold On, Pain Ends.”
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Robbie’s Hope wants to inspire Colorado’s teenagers to talk to each other to destigmatize anxiety and depression. They enlist teen ambassadors to talk with their peers, so that feeling depressed or anxious isn’t as isolating. The non-profit also leaned on the expertise of teenagers themselves to create a guide for adults on how to talk to teenagers about depression and suicide.
Their basic message is to convince teenagers that “it’s OK to not be OK.”
We helped them raised more than $26,000 to continue their work.
6/2/21 | Warren Village: This week, as the Word of Thanks micro-giving campaign turned 1-year-old, we turned our attention to Warren Village, a long-time non-profit dedicated to helping single parents, and therefore, changing the lives of whole families in Colorado.
This group helps build a foundation of education, health and financial security. The impact lasts generations. How? Warren Village provides two or three years of housing for single parents and their children. They pay a portion of their income in rent, but the real focus is on the career coaching parents get to start or finish a degree and to get established for a secure financial future. This is all while their children receive specialized child care and early education that can help them overcome learning difficulties or mental health issues.
You all gave more than $102,000 for the cause.
5/26/21 | Colorado Freedom Memorial: The Colorado Freedom Memorial was the first of its kind in America — a memorial to all the state’s service members lost. They display of Coloradans killed in action from the Spanish American War to the present day.
But part of the memorial is crumbling. The granite foundation is coming apart with time. It can be fixed, but this is an expensive project that would eat into the budget organizers use for events and other programs.
As we approached Memorial Day, we wanted to use our Word of Thanks micro-giving campaign to help the Colorado Freedom Memorial — a special project we can do together in honor of those who have served and sacrificed.
Our $43,000 in donations will help keep the Colorado Freedom Memorial a beautiful place for years to come.
5/19/21 | Food Bank of the Rockies’ Totes of Hope program: Food Bank of the Rockies’ Totes of Hope program has been around for 15 years, and it’s lasted that long because it works.
When kids leave school on Fridays, they’re sent home with enough food to feed a family for the weekend. In the summertime, the program moves from schools to other places like community centers and church camps.
Single parents, especially, have told Food Bank of the Rockies that weekends are when they most struggle with food. Those are days when kids can’t get meals at school or childcare, and getting the whole family to a food bank can be challenging.
In addition to sending children home with food, the Totes of Hope programs also just started doing ingredients and recipes, so families can cook together.
We spent May collecting money for the Food Bank of the Rockies to address hunger in this state. This week, we want to help this specific program were able to collect $41,000 to help.
5/12/21 | Food Bank of the Rockies’ mobile pantries: Whether it’s a lack of reliable public transit in the suburbs, or driving an hour out on the Plains, Coloradans who are far from grocery stores and food banks have a transportation hurdle to feeding their families.
This week, we wanted to highlight the mobile pantries sent out across Colorado by the Food Bank of the Rockies.
You’ve likely heard the term “food deserts,” or areas underserved by grocery stores. Food Bank of the Rockies rolls out 70 refrigerated trucks a month, like a food bank on wheels, to deliver fresh produce and other groceries.
They first locate pockets of need, where Coloradans could use help with access to fresh produce and other food items. Then they pick a day and time, spread the word and show up to help.
Food Bank of the Rockies goes out on these mobile pantry missions more than 800 times a year, and they cover the cost. We can help send out even more.
You collected more than $28,000 for the cause.
5/5/21 | Food Bank of the Rockies’ Culturally Responsive Foods Initiative:
This isn’t the first time we’ve said this, but it’s worth saying again that the demand on food banks spiked with the pandemic because the demand really hasn’t let up. Food Bank of the Rockies says 40% of the people coming to them for help are looking for food assistance for the first time. These are people who hadn’t been to food banks prior to the pandemic.
This week, we sought out to support and expand the Food Bank of the Rockies’ Culturally Responsive Foods Initiative. The concept is about more than food. This is about families, memories and traditions.
This program aims to deliver certain foods to communities in Colorado — the foods these communities want to eat and what they want to cook with, rather than just the traditional food bank staple items.
Maybe this seems like a simple thing, but it’s had a profound impact. Think about how food is woven into our family stories and traditions. Think about not being able to afford that food and not seeing it in food banks. Working with partners statewide, the food bank listens to the requests of communities, whether they are Latino, Vietnamese, Ethiopian, Somali, Russian, Northern Arapaho and Eastern Shoshone. Then, the program goes the extra mile and extra dollar to find the food items that mean a lot to them.
You raised more than $41,000 to help this program continue.
4/28/21 | LuBird’s Light Foundation: A long-awaited plan to build an inclusive playground for kids of all abilities has hit a snag, just months before it was set to open.
The playground is going in at Stanley Marketplace in Aurora, and this is going to be a special spot. It’s close to Children’s Hospital so that families can visit, and there won’t be the typical barriers keeping out kids in wheelchairs, or kids who have other challenges. This will be accessible in every way — from the surface beneath our feet and wheels, to the equipment, which will include a wheelchair bouncer and an accessible merry-go-round.
But this playground is for everyone. All kids, of every ability, will be welcome.
A non-profit called LuBird’s Light Foundation raised money for years and broke ground last year. That’s when they discovered soil issues that are expensive to fix.
You go them $73,700 closer to opening the playground.
4/21/21 | Colorado Search and Rescue teams: Each county in Colorado has its own search and rescue team — typically volunteers who, along with giving their time, tend to spend $4,000 to $10,000 of their own money on training and equipment to keep all of us safe in Colorado’s wild, beautiful places.
Even with that, they still need help, whether it be for new equipment or upgrading old vehicles. The statewide non-profit that advocates for these groups collected our $53,000 in donations, then started a grant process to award money to high-priority needs without taking any money for overhead.
4/14/21 | SAVA Center: Sexual assault can create a lifetime of trauma, which is why the support for sexual assault survivors in Colorado is so critical. The Sexual Assault Victim Advocate Center, or SAVA Center, in Northern Colorado offers help to survivors of recent assaults, as well as to survivors of assaults that happened years or even decades ago. They even work on prevention, creating programs that reach thousands of students.
The SAVA Center also continues to build trust with the immigrant community, where convincing people to come forward after an assault and assuring them they’ll be protected is a challenge.
The pandemic made it harder for survivors to escape abusive situations, and the SAVA Center expects to see a wave of people seeking help as society fully reopens. Sadly, the pandemic has impacted funding, as well. Next viewers donated more than $25,000 to help them.
4/7/21 | Center for African American Health: The Center for African American Health (CAA) has been committed to supporting Denver’s Black community since 2005. This group started within the Black Church Initiative and has grown into a nonprofit that addresses the community’s physical health and wellbeing.
CAA offers free prostate screenings to men and overall health screenings at its health fair. It helps connect people with healthy food and offers mental health first-aid training. It even teaches people about health insurance coverage and aging in a healthy way.
In spring, when all adults in Colorado became eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, CAA focused its work on access and breaking down barriers in many ways — COVID testing, vaccine clinics, vaccine education and outreach.
You raised $43,000 to support the cause.
3/31/21 | COVA: The Colorado Organization for Victim Assistance (COVA) is a non-profit that can quickly help crime victims with emergency funds for things like groceries and phone bills.
The names of crime victims line the walls at their office, and most names would not be familiar. Their cases aren’t always in the news, so strangers aren’t likely to reach out to help.
There are state and federal victims assistance funds, but COVA keeps a small emergency fund to help out when that other assistance will be too slow or too limited to immediately help a crime victim in Colorado. Victims’ advocates apply for the funds on behalf of their clients, so it’s all legitimate. COVA can then turn around emergency help in 20 minutes if that’s what’s needed.
The money can be used to get a car out of impound, get a phone bill paid, repair property damage, get someone a gift card for gas or groceries for their family.
These victims’ advocates work all across our state and are there for people in the worst moments in their lives when they can not only feel victimized, but forgotten.
Next viewers raised $33,000 for this nonprofit.
3/23/21: Community Foundation Boulder County’s crisis fund: Next typically highlights a new cause every Wednesday as part of our Word of Thanks micro-giving campaign. In light of what happened during this week, when 10 people were killed at the Boulder King Soopers, we got a day’s head start by turning our attention to Community Foundation Boulder County’s crisis fund.
The foundation has an established history of helping in Boulder, whether it be with environmental concerns, veterans’ causes or art programs. The list is long.
In this case, their Boulder County Crisis Fund told us it could directly help victims’ families and others who were impacted by the shooting. The fund will be around for the long haul to help the people who need it.
Community Foundation Boulder County partnered with the City of Boulder and smaller non-profits to operate the fund to support these families and the community. Specifically, this group came together with: the City of Boulder, Rose Community Foundation, Longmont Community Foundation, Westview Church, Congregation Har Hashem, Congregation Bonai Shalom, First Congregational Church, Boulder Mennonite Church, First UMC of Lafayette, Community Church of Lyons, Islamic Center of Boulder, and the Colorado Healing Fund.
The Boulder County Crisis Fund hit the $1 million in a week. Next viewers raised $296,000 to help the cause, accounting for more than a quarter of that total.
3/17/21 | The Matthews House: The Matthews House started 15 years ago with an original goal of helping those who were aging out of foster care. The vision grew, and this group now works with more than 3,000 families each year to help younger people succeed, especially trying to intervene earlier with at-risk kids.
One of their great success stories is educational support. The Matthews House helps students stick with school and get on track to graduate. Last fall, students came in with an average of 45% in their classes and left with an average grade of 73%. The non-profit has 14 learning sites in Fort Collins and Loveland, and the program grew eight times larger during the pandemic.
Knowing summer 2021 would be busy after a difficult school year, they wanted to prepare to help hundreds of students in Northern Colorado make up credits they missed and prepare to graduate.
Next viewers donated $55,000 to support the cause.
3/10/21 | Cultivando: The women of Cultivando do important work. This is a small but mighty non-profit that has a long track record of advocating for health equity in the Latino community. The promotoras, the community health workers of Cultivando, are trusted resources in Adams County, the only county in the metro area where more than a third of the population is Latino.
In March, Cultivando’s promotoras sought to help spread the word about COVID-19 vaccines. They wanted to make sure mass vaccination events provided enough outreach to all communities, and they wanted to help individuals navigate resources and information about the vaccine. With more than $28,000 in donations, this group could scale up their services to meet the demand.
3/3/21 | Epic Experience: Sharon Ritzman watched Next from her home in Golden. And before she died in February 2021, she was a regular supporter of our Word of Thanks micro-giving campaign – so much so, that her family asked for people to consider giving to our weekly Word of Thanks causes in her obituary.
Sharon lived a life full of adventures with her family and volunteerism tied to the medical community. During this week, Kyle asked Sharon’s family if they would help pick our featured non-profit so that we might find something that would have made Sharon smile. That’s how we learned about Epic Experience, based in Arvada. Sharon supported their work.
Epic Experience hosts weeklong adventure camps for adult cancer survivors, strengthening their mental health and connecting them to a network of survivors who can help them explore life beyond cancer. They even set out to launch some virtual reality getaways for patients who couldn’t safely be around others.
Sharon’s daughter, Michelle, went on an Epic Experience camp. And Sharon herself went back to school to become a nurse to work with families facing cancer.
The people who run this small non-profit say they have eight times as many cancer survivors interested in these no-cost camps than they have available spots. Next viewers gave them more than $46,000 to help provide the experience to more people.
2/24/21 | Lincoln Hills Cares: In 1922, Black entrepreneurs in Denver began building a resort in Gilpin County. It was intended to be a mountain getaway for Black Coloradans who faced discrimination at other vacation spots. Lincoln Hills grew into a thriving community of cabins, drawing families who wanted an escape from life in the city and racial inequality.
Today, Lincoln Hills is a place where, every year, more than a thousand kids get to explore nature, learn about science and gain a new appreciation for their cultural history. Young Coloradans have the chance to come away with new interests and new skills in outdoor survival, biology and entomology — not to mention a new appreciation for what previous generations of Black Coloradans built at that special camp.
These young visitors come from all over the state, primarily from marginalized communities where economic factors might prevent families from getting the mountain experience that a lot of Coloradans take for granted.
Our donations this week supported Lincoln Hills Cares, the non-profit based at the old resort property. You raised more than $55,000 to help them prepare for a summer filled with YMCA and church groups, student visits and Boys and Girls Clubs.
2/17/21 | Urban Peak: Urban Peak has a 30-year track record of helping young people experiencing homelessness in Denver. The teenagers and young adults who turn to this nonprofit need help for different reasons, but Urban Peak meets them where they are with experienced, specialized support. Urban Peak has an overnight shelter, a place for young people to come during the day to escape the streets, as well as job training, education resources, and a focus on getting youth into housing where they’ll be safe and self-sufficient.
Even with 2020’s challenges, Urban Peak did that for more than 60 young people last year, doing what they could to scrape together the basics like a bed, chair and cooking utensils. With the help of our $63,000 in donations, the head of Urban Peak told us she wanted to let each young person buy one small thing of their choice to make their new housing feel like their home.
2/10/21 | Western Colorado Community Foundation: Donations made this week were divided among three non-profits doing important work in western Colorado to prevent youth suicide. YouthZone, Gear Up and Friends of Youth and Nature use outdoor adventure as a way to get counseling and mentoring to young people who are at risk:
- Youth Zone works with young people in Garfield County, Rifle and Parachute specifically, who have been in trouble and need guidance to get on the right track again.
- Gear Up provides mentoring for middle schoolers in Mesa County, but it’s disguised as a mountain biking program, getting young people to set goals early in life to stay out of trouble and stay away from discouragement.
- Friends of Youth in Montrose and Delta counties does work with kids in foster care who have survived trauma so that they can build confidence and resilience skills.
The Western Colorado Community Foundation collected and split your $56,000 in donations in three ways. They even got us started with $5,000.
If someone in your life is in crisis today and needs immediate help, Colorado Crisis Service is available 24-7. You can call 844-493-8255, or text the word “TALK” to 38255.
2/3/21 | Laboratory to Combat Human Trafficking: The Laboratory to Combat Human Trafficking is a Denver-based non-profit dedicated to ending human trafficking in Colorado. They have found that the key to stopping this practice is training more people to spot it, and this group has been working on just that for more than a decade. They’ve trained 35,000 people on how to spot human trafficking, including law enforcement, hospitality workers and people who work in health care and child welfare. We heard from one of those law enforcement officers just before we highlighted the cause. Colorado State Patrol Trooper Brent Crampton stepped in to stop a case of human trafficking in 2020 after his training. Crampton told us that he wondered if he missed other cases before he knew the signs and techniques to intervene. Together, Next viewers raised more than $44,000 to help The Laboratory to Combat Human Trafficking reach more people across our state and train them, potentially rescuing victims and saving lives.
1/27/21 | WeeCycle: WeeCycle is a non-profit providing diapers and other baby essentials to low-income families around Denver. During the pandemic, they focused on getting those baby items to food banks, so that families in need could get those essentials in one stop. Through Word of Thanks, they hoped they could immediately start helping families by giving them two packs of diapers instead of one. Next viewers were able to buy many diapers, raising more than $94,000 this week.
1/20/21 | Branson, Colorado’s football field: Since we started the Word of Thanks micro-giving campaign in June 2020, we’ve addressed serious topics in our state ranging from hunger to wildfires. This time, we thought we’d focus on joy. Branson is a dot on the map in the southeast part of the state. In 2016, the people living there were thrilled to have a six-man high school football team for the first time in a long time, but their field, carved out of old pastureland, was rough — so rough that even after Branson students tried to pick out every rock and nurture the grass, it was still a mess. Because of that, Branson’s opponents announced late last year that they won’t play there for fear of getting hurt. Now Branson, with a population of less than 100, is trying to raise money to install an artificial turf football field. But this is about more than football. This town sees a new field as a place of pride and a chance to build a place for the community to gather. Next viewers helped get them $82,000 closer to their goal. They’re still collecting donations, but in spring 2021, the town broke ground on the project.
1/13/21 | Jeffco Prosperity Partners: Jeffco Prosperity Partners helps families reach their personalized goals while getting out of poverty. If the goal is a better-paying job, Jeffco Prosperity Partners can come in with career counseling and tuition assistance. If the focus is on overcoming mental health challenges, they are there to walk side-by-side with them through that. If the hope is to buy a house, Jeffco Prosperity Partners can guide them toward that goal. This nonprofit provides coaching and direct financial support to families below the poverty line in Jefferson County — keeping kids in school, making sure families stay physically and mentally healthy, guiding them down paths to increase their income and savings and decrease their reliance on government assistance. You raised nearly $32,000 to help them achieve those goals.
1/6/21 | Mountain Family Center: The Modern West podcast is where Kyle learned about the struggle to find and afford fresh, healthy food in Jackson County. For the relatively isolated and small communities in the North Park area, Mountain Family Center is their connection to food and support from neighbors when they need it – that includes food pantries, grocery deliveries and even pharmacy runs. The non-profit runs the only food bank in Jackson County, in Walden. They also have three other locations in Grand County, in Granby, Kremmling and Fraser. You raised $66,000 this week to get fresh food to these families.
RELATED: ‘Word of Thanks’ nonprofits highlighted by Next with Kyle Clark in 2020
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