Sweet Memories

Posh Seven
By Betsy Trainor
Tuesday, November 17, 2020

In this busy modern world of social media and constant snap moments, we sometimes forget how profound small gestures such as a birthday cake can make in a child’s life. When I was young, my best friend lived in an old home with a single mom. They struggled every day to make ends meet. On her 10th birthday, her mom had a Big Bird cake made at a local bakery. All these years later, I can still see the bright yellow frosting feathers and his candy stick legs with a shiny orange beak. I’m sure it was a huge sacrifice for her mom to buy that cake. A volunteer organization called Cake4Kids.org recognized the importance of making milestones like this important for all children…

New Nonprofit Chapter Bakes Up Joy for Kids

Uplift Loudoun
By Lia Hobel
Thursday, October 8, 2020

Birthday cakes are something that many of us take for granted. Unfortunately, there are children who have never experienced the joy of a birthday cake on their special day.

A newly launched nonprofit chapter is working hard to change this.

Cake4Kids opened a Loudoun chapter in August. The mission of Cake4Kids is to raise the self-esteem and confidence of these children by delivering a cake to them on their special day.

Dottie Swanson is the ambassador of the new Loudoun Chapter. She began as a volunteer baker with a Northern Virginia chapter and knew she wanted to do more…

A Sweet start: Volunteer bakers make sure no child has cake-less birthday

The Leader
By Luciano Marano
Sunday, September 27, 2020 at 8:00 am

Calling all culinary artisans: Unthinkably, it seems there are kids whose birthdays are bereft of cake.

Quickly, to the kitchen!

Yes, even more unthinkable than Paul Hollywood tolerating soggy-bottomed pastries on “The Great British Bake Off” is the thought of a child who has never known a birthday cake. And it was just such a sad story that inspired Cynthia Castro Sweet to sign on as a volunteer baker for the nonprofit Cake4Kids, which provides at-risk and underprivileged kids with customized and personalized sweet treats on their big day.

The Power of Cake

The Stanford Daily
By Kiana George on August 27, 2020

Let’s talk about cake. Cake is the product of layering cooked batter, moist frosting and varying toppings. It comes in every flavor imaginable — something as simple as dark chocolate fudge to something as strange as sweet olive oil. But cake is much more than just a dessert — it evokes a level of joy no other food can…

Sunnyvale Silicon Valley Chamber of Commerce Awards Cake4Kids for Outstanding Community Contribution 2020

On February 22, 2020, Cake4Kids was honored by the Sunnyvale Silicon Valley Chamber of Commerce at the 55th Annual Murphy Awards Dinner.

Councilmember Russ Melton presented us with the award for Outstanding Community Contribution. We spoke about our amazing and selfless volunteers and proudly accepted this award.

This award belongs to all of you who bake in Santa Clara County. Thank you!

Black History Month: Performing Stars, Black aviators encourage students to 'reach for the skies'

Cake4Kids donated treats to our agency partner, Performing Stars of Marin, for this amazing event!

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ABC7 News
By Jobina Fortson
Friday, February 21, 2020

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- Performing Stars is a nonprofit helping underserved kids in Marin County achieve their potential.

The organization hosted an event at Lucasfilm where students learned about the Tuskegee airmen. The airmen, who fought in World War II, became the first black pilots in the U.S. military.

Performing Stars students then got to come face to face with today's black pilots, aviation professionals, and even an astronaut.

Every speaker on the stage is continuing to make black history. They desperately hope by sharing their experiences, they'll encourage other young minds to take flight.

The industry needs them. Every airline is experiencing a major pilot and technician shortage.

A Boeing 2019 report projects that 804,000 new civil aviation pilots, 769,000 new maintenance technicians, and 914,000 new cabin crew will be needed to fly and maintain the world fleet over the next 20 years.

The diversity numbers are even more stunning. According to Alaska Airlines, black female pilots make up about one half of 1 percent of all professional pilots across the industry.

"I have had a lot of firsts," Alaska Airlines Captain Tara Wright said. "It's sort of interesting that in 2018, I was part of the first all African American female flight crew for Alaska Airlines."

Captain Wright's flight traveled from SFO to Portland. She's an Oakland native and has girls believing a woman's place is at 30,000 feet.

Students were beaming after learning about careers in aviation.

"I want to be a pilot," Akasha Moore, a 5-year-old Performing Stars student, said.

"I love brownies and flying in the sky," Kashmeer Gomez, a 4-year-old Performing Stars student said.

Flying is expensive and not always accessible. Courtland Savage developed a nonprofit that's finding a way around that.

"With Fly for the Culture, we're promoting diversity and inclusion in the aviation industry," Courtland Savage, pilot and CEO of Fly for the Culture said. "We're doing that by taking young children up on free flights on a smaller aircraft. I want every kid to get a chance to fly."

Lieutenant Colonel Jason Harris hails from Oakland as well. He said every time he flies in and out of that airport, he gets chills. He wants other black children to one day have that same experience.

"I stand on the shoulders of giants just like those original Tuskegee airmen," Lt. Col. Harris said. "I want these young people to have the opportunity to see that I'm just like them, and to show them that they have the opportunity to stand on my shoulders and all those that were on that stage with me today."

If the video above doesn’t work, you can watch the segment here.

Spreading Joy Through Baking

The Kentucky Standard
By Kacie Goode
Tuesday, February 11, 2020 at 1:28 pm (Updated: February 11, 4:10 pm)

Candice Humphrey believes every child deserves to feel special at least one day a year, regardless of financial or home circumstances. This is part of the reason she launched a local chapter — Kentucky’s first — of Cake4Kids, a program bringing together volunteer bakers to provide birthday cakes for at-risk children…

Cake4Kids Makes Birthdays Special For Local Kids In Foster Care And Homeless Shelters

The Silicon Valley Voice
Erika Towne
February 6, 2020, 08:00 AM

The Sunnyvale nonprofit Cake4Kids doesn’t have an official location, but the footprint that it leaves on Bay Area youth living in foster care is immeasurable. For the past 10 years, Cake4Kids has partnered with a variety of local agencies that work with kids in the foster care system, group homes, homeless shelters and domestic violence shelters bringing them birthday cakes on a day that is otherwise forgotten…

SDJA Students Give Back to Five Local Charities — Cake4Kids

[Cake4Kids San Diego Ambassador Alison Andreas, third from left, accepting a giant check from SJDA] SDJA presented checks to five local nonprofits. (Karen Billing)

[Cake4Kids San Diego Ambassador Alison Andreas, third from left, accepting a giant check from SJDA] SDJA presented checks to five local nonprofits. (Karen Billing)

Del Mar Times
By Karen Billing
January 23, 2019 6:50 a.m.

San Diego Jewish Academy students presented $7,066.15 to five local nonprofits at an assembly on Jan. 18. The gifts were the proceeds of the students’ Hanukkah charitable project that reflects the Jewish value of Tikkun Olam, which means “repairing the world.” Giant checks were given to Friendship Circle, Cake4Kids, Canine Companions for Independence, Make-A-Wish San Diego and Lev LaLev, a girls orphanage in Netanaya, Israel.

The SDJA project is known as Tamchui, which is an Aramaic word that means "community collection pot.” Parent volunteers Jacqueline Shapiro and Karin Zell helped organize the project to help provide students with a deeper experience when it comes to giving back and impacting their community.

For the Tamchui project, eighth grade students heard presentations from the five different charity organizations. The eighth graders were then in charge of spreading the word about each charity to the entire K-12 student body—speaking about how Friendship Circle offers fun and inclusive activities for kids and teens with special needs or how Cake4Kids provides birthday cakes for underprivileged children to help celebrate their special day.

All SDJA students then “donated” by placing poker chips in the fishbowl boxes of the charity of choice, in a room lined with festive posters of each charity.

The canine companion in attendance at the school assembly was especially popular with the kids and the nonprofit received the largest individual donation of $1,719.83.

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Link to article

3 Creative Ways to Help Out Kids in Marin -- Bake with Cake4Kids!

There are a lot more ways to volunteer with the county's young people than you might think

Marin Magazine
Jessica Gliddon
January 7, 2020

Volunteering is one of those things that many of us feel like we should do, but many of us avoid. We already struggle to carve out time in our busy schedules. But what if we could volunteer in a way that we enjoyed? If you like spending time with kids, here are three ways you can help out. You might just end up doing something you like doing in the process.

BAKE A CAKE

If you enjoy baking, why not make it a way to give back? Cake4Kids gives youth who are homeless, exposed to violence or human trafficking, in foster care or living at the poverty line a chance to feel special. Serving 10 different counties in California, volunteers bake and deliver personalized birthday cakes, cupcakes, cookies, bars or brownies to underprivileged kids. Not a master baker? Doesn’t matter, Cake4Kids is happy to accept even the simplest of baked goods – what’s important is that it puts a smile on kids’ faces.

Be a Storyteller

Communicate the joy of reading to kids as a storytelling volunteer with the Marin County Free Library. Volunteers select books that encourage language-building play and read them to children in a laundromat for 20 to 30 minutes. Marin locations include The Wash Tub in Corte Madera and Speed-Dee Wash in San Anselmo.

Tutor Latino Youth

Specifically targeting the cycle of poverty faced by Latino immigrants and their families, Canal Alliance works to educate, empower and lend support to motivated kids. The after-school University Prep program assists 120 low-income Latino young people in completing a four-year college degree, with daily tutoring in core subjects and homework help. So far 100 percent of its graduates have enrolled in four-year state universities.

These San Diego Charities & Organizations Need Your Help in 2020 — Cake4Kids

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By Mary Beth Abate
Updated November 22, 2019 10:53 a.m. EST

The holiday season has arrived, and with it comes the usual sense of goodwill and generosity that many of us feel towards our fellow humans. How can you hold on to that feeling all year long? It's simple: by giving your time to help those who are struggling with illiteracy, poverty, illness, who need someone to talk to or just a kind shoulder to lean on. Here in San Diego, sites like VolunteerMatch and HandsOn San Diego help you find volunteer opportunities that are the best fit for you. In that spirit, we’ve collected more than two dozen local nonprofits and organizations where you can provide help for your fellow San Diegans. And, remember, if you can’t commit your time, each of the sites below have a “Donate” button to make it easier than every to help someone in need.

Bake for at-risk youth

Birthdays and cake go hand-in-hand, and every child should know the feeling of having a cake, cookies, cupcakes, or other sweet treats made just for them on their special day. Founder Libby Gruender began Cake4Kids in 2010 after being inspired by a news story about a young foster child’s emotional reaction to receiving her very first birthday cake. Now, Cake4Kids partners with over 140 agencies that support at-risk children and young adults (ages 1-24) who are in foster care, group homes, homeless shelters, transitional and low income housing, and domestic violence and human trafficking shelters. Volunteers purchase ingredients, bake and decorate the goodies in their own homes, and deliver them to an assigned agency, which ensures that it reaches the birthday child. You should be a reasonably decent baker and decorator and over 18, with a valid driver’s license and proof of auto insurance. Bakers 16-17 years old can participate as part of a parent/child team.

Link to full article

Food, Fun, Information at WFCM Client Fair

The Connection Newspapers
By Bonnie Hobbs
October 17, 2019

As part of Hunger Action Month, Western Fairfax Christian Ministries (WFCM) held a Client Fair on Saturday, Sept. 28. More than 30 of the families it serves attended and were greeted with a variety of food and information.

Partners participating in the fair included: Girls on the Run NOVA, Cake4Kids

PRESS RELEASE: Cake4Kids Celebrates Nine Years in Santa Clara County Delivering Smiles to Local Children

 
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More than 8,000 birthday cakes have been delivered to at-risk youth

September 17, 2019

SUNNYVALE, Calif. - For many children, a birthday is a special day filled with fun, family — and birthday cake. But for foster children and other at-risk youth, their special day is not always so.

Cake4Kids, a nonprofit organization founded in 2010 by Sunnyvale resident Libby Gruender, is celebrating its ninth birthday on September 17. The organization partners with Santa Clara County human and social services agencies to deliver birthday cakes, cupcakes or other treats to local at-risk youth. For many, it is the first birthday cake they have ever received. The cakes are baked by a dedicated group of volunteer bakers from Santa Clara County, who use their talents to put smiles on children's faces.

Since September 2010, Cake4Kids has served Santa Clara County underserved youth by:

  • Baking and delivering 8,260 cakes

  • Partnering with 54 local agencies to help ensure these youth have a birthday to remember

  • Growing its dedicated corps of volunteer bakers to more than 450

"The simple gift of a cake means so much more to these children than just a sweet treat. Our goal is to raise the children's self-esteem and confidence on their special day. It may be just a cake but the children we bake for know someone took the time and made the effort to do something special just for them," said Julie Eades, Executive Director of Cake4Kids. "We are so grateful to our wonderful volunteer bakers for all they do for the children - they are our secret ingredient!"

Cake4Kids currently operates in 10 counties in California and in Fairfax County, Virginia and has baked in excess of 15,000 cakes to underserved children since its founding.

Local human and social services agencies submit cake requests through an online portal, providing the child's requests, including their flavor preferences as well as their interests such as superheroes, NFL teams or the ever-popular Elsa from the Frozen movie. Bakers sign up to bake the cakes and deliver them to the agency

"I've always loved baking cakes. Then I met Libby when our boys were young, and I heard her idea for Cake4Kids," said Christina Cary, one of Cake4Kids longest-serving volunteers. "I knew it was a way to combine my hobby with helping foster children, and I signed up immediately. I just imagine if my own son didn't get a birthday cake, and I'm glad I can make one for another child."

To celebrate its ninth birthday, Cake4Kids is hosting a get-together for its local volunteers and bakers at a local establishment in Sunnyvale. For more information, visit Cake4Kids.org.

Cake4Kids Still Cooking One Year Later

Carmichael Times
Story and photos by Trina L. Dotar
August 23, 2019

SACRAMENTO REGION, CA (MPG) - In 2018, Cake4Kids arrived in Sacramento, thanks to Mary Barnes’ efforts. Barnes is the Sacramento ambassador for the Sunnyvale-based nonprofit. She has grown her area volunteers into a force of nearly 100 strong. Two dozen gathered on August 3rd to celebrate the one year anniversary of the first cake delivery in Sacramento to Opening Doors…

Cake4Kids Bakes Birthday Cakes for At-Risk Kids (Radio Interview)

If the audio above doesn’t work, you can listen to the segment here.

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The Afternoon News with Kitty O'Neal
By Kitty O'Neal
July 30, 2019

Cake4Kids celebrates one year in Sacramento delivering smiles to local children

More than 135 birthday cakes have been delivered to at-risk youth since August 2018

For many children, a birthday is a special day filled with fun, family — and birthday cake. But for foster children, refugees and other at-risk youth, their special day is not always so.

Cake4Kids has been partnering with Sacramento-area social service agencies since August 2018 to deliver birthday cakes, cupcakes or other treats to local at-risk youth. For many, it is the first birthday cake they have ever received. The cakes are baked by a dedicated group of volunteer bakers from the Sacramento area, who use their talents to put smiles on childrens’ faces.

Since August 2018, Cake4Kids has:

  • Made more than 135 deliveries to Sacramento area youth

  • Partnered with 24 local agencies to help ensure these youth have a birthday to remember

  • Grown our dedicated corps of volunteer bakers to more than 90

“A birthday cake is a very simple, but very powerful way to let a child know that they are loved and are important,” said Mary Barnes, Sacramento Cake4Kids ambassador. “There is such a need in this area, and I am so grateful for our many, many volunteers who have stepped up over the past year and shown the power that individuals can have on the lives of young people.”

Local agencies submit cake requests through an online portal, providing the age and gender of the child, their flavor preferences as well as their interests (such as superheroes, princesses, soccer or Moana). Bakers sign up to bake high-quality cakes and deliver them directly to the agency.

"I'm so grateful to be a volunteer baker with Cake4Kids," said Katrina Butcher, a Sacramento Cake4Kids volunteer baker. "It's so unique to work with an organization that makes it possible for me to volunteer my time in a creative way and feels good to know that I'm helping someone feel special."

To celebrate the one-year anniversary, Cake4Kids Sacramento is hosting two events: an anniversary party for volunteers on Aug. 3 at Mango’s restaurant in Sacramento, and an open-to-the-public meet-up at Urban Roots Brewery on Sept. 17. Volunteer orientations are held monthly, and cake deliveries are made weekly.

For more information, visit Cake4Kids.org.

Cake4Kids Makes Birthday Cake Wishes Come True for Disadvantaged Youth

Berkeleyside NOSH
By Katie Lauter
March 5, 2019, 2 p.m.

Imagine growing up never having a birthday cake.

For the majority of us, the thought is difficult, if not inconceivable, to imagine. Most of us are fortunate to have celebrated our childhood birthdays with some kind of baked confections. But there are many children who will never receive a single birthday cake in their lives. A nonprofit called Cake4Kids is helping to change that…

Sharing the Spirit: Napan bakes cakes and cupcakes so kids can enjoy birthdays, holidays

Napa Valley Register
By Jennifer Huffman
Dec 26, 2018

A child without a birthday cake sounds absolutely awful.

Napa resident Amanda Kimbrough agrees 100 percent.

“I can’t imagine having my kids in that situation,” she said. “It would be heartbreaking.”

A busy mom of three (ages 4, 3 and 8 months), Kimbrough finds time to volunteer for a Sunnyvale-based nonprofit called Cake4Kids…