Schools

Garrett Elementary Students Help Out The Shoeman

Led by its student council, Garrett Elementary School collected 200 pairs of shoes for Shoeman Water Projects.

Some say children have the purest hears to good for others in need. This statement was proven true as students collected 200 pairs of shoes to aide with clean water efforts in Africa.

Led by its student council, the student body at Garrett decided to participate in the Shoeman Water Projects. Shoeman Water Projects is a non-profit company that takes donated, used and new shoes from businesses, churches, schools and special events.

“We tried to come up with a new services program each month,” Toni Grimes, one of the school event sponsors, said. “We set a goal of 100 pairs of shoes and when we were mid-way through the project, we already had 98 pairs so we encouraged others to donate and we raised our goal to 120 pairs.”

Find out what's happening in Hazelwoodwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Shoeman sells them to exporters in South America, Haiti, India, Africa and other places where people need affordable footwear. Other program benefits are that the shoes avoid going to landfills and shoe resale promotes micro retail businesses in nations which import the footwear.

The profit Shoeman receives from selling shoes is then used to buy drilling rigs and equipment to drill for water and water purification equipment to bring clean water to places such as Haiti, India, Kenya and South America.

Find out what's happening in Hazelwoodwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

At Garrett, student council co-sponsor Jan Haffer along with Grimes coordinated the effort. They showed the student council members a video about what Shoeman does so they understood the process.

“The kids were so excited about it," Haffer said. "They created oversized shoeboxes where people could leave donated shoes.”

The co-sponsors helped the students come with ideas for posters that they hung around the school to encourage donations. Students laced or rubber-banded donated shoes together.

“The morning I took the shoes to the local collection site I found two more pairs hanging from my doorknob,” Haffer said and added the efforts will be duplicated next year. “We will do this again next year.”

Kerry Pinnell served as the updater, counting the donated shoes and revising the total after each count.

“I feel good for the countries that will get clean water,”  she said.

Emmanuel Kahindi, whose family is from Kenya, was just happy to participate.

“I feel happy I helped,” Emmanuel said. “I counted how many bags and how many shoes were in there.”

Shoeman has collected more than one million donated shoes since '08 and those donations resulted in new wells drilled in Kenya and water purification systems installed in Haiti.

“Every pair donated really saves two lives,” said Karl Johnson, part of the Shoeman project. “Someone gets a cheap pair of shoes that never would have had them and someone gets life-saving water.”


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from Hazelwood