Kiwanis clubs reach kids through bicycle projects

Kiwanis clubs reach kids through bicycle projects

From safety to supplies, bike-focused service has proven popular and effective around the world.

By Tony Knoderer

No matter where you are, two things always seem to go together: children and bicycles. For Kiwanis clubs, that makes service projects that focus on bikes a great way to serve kids — and to make your mark in the community. Looking for ideas and inspiration? In recent years, these projects and programs have helped clubs around the world reach kids. 

These are just a few of the ways Kiwanis clubs are reaching kids by focusing on bicycles. How does your club make a difference through bike-related initiatives? 

Kiwanis club program connects kids, cops and books

Kiwanis club program connects kids, cops and books

In Barbados, a literacy initiative gets its first placement outside the United States.

By Tony Knoderer

Since 2020, Kiwanis clubs in the Wisconsin-Upper Michigan District have been conducting a program that fosters positive relations between children and police officers in their communities — while also promoting literacy among the kids. Started in Appleton, Wisconsin, U.S., in 2020, Kiwanis ’n Cops ’n Kids gives kids access to free books and to reading events that include local law enforcement.  

In fact, the program has been growing among clubs throughout the U.S. for the past four years. And with a recent event in Barbados, Kiwanis ’n Cops ’n Kids has expanded outside the U.S. for the first time.  

On February 29, Kiwanis leaders Jean Long Manteufel and Delores Lewis joined members of the Kiwanis Club of Barbados Central — along with local law enforcement representatives, employees of the day nursery where the event took place and about 30 children — for the island country’s kickoff event.  

One police officer, Constable Shawn Phillips, read to the kids from “Down on the Farm” and National Geographic’s “Ponies,” encouraging the kids to make animal sounds as he turned the pages. 

The event was an important milestone for Manteufel, who started the program in 2020-21, when she was the governor of the Wisconsin-Upper Michigan District. That’s also when she met Lewis, who became governor of the Eastern Canada and the Caribbean District that year.

“Delores was in my governor’s class, which is how we became friends,” Manteufel says. “When my husband and I planned a trip to Barbados, I asked her if they would be doing any reading projects while we were there. She said yes. I told her about this special program, so we united to launch the program in Barbados.” 

Taking the leap
Kiwanis ’n Cops ’n Kids started because Manteufel needed a project as her district’s incoming governor.  

“Each year, our governor picks a project that the clubs all contribute to financially, so we can have a big impact,” she says. “But this was during the pandemic. I couldn’t ask clubs to give money when they had all lost their fundraisers and couldn’t even meet.” 

Manteufel looked for something both affordable and manageable for clubs of all sizes. Fortunately, she is a longtime friend of LeRoy Butler, a former Green Bay Packer and member of the National Football League Hall of Fame. (He’s also the originator of the “Lambeau Leap” — hence the tribute of scheduling the Barbados event for Leap Day.) 

“I also knew that LeRoy was very involved in service to children,” Manteufel says, “so I asked if he had any thoughts. He immediately responded, ‘Cops ’N Kids.’ I learned that LeRoy has a special place in his heart for this program and promotes it whenever he can.” 

How it came to Kiwanis
Cops ’N Kids was founded in 1997 by Julia Burney (now Julia Witherspoon), who was then a police officer in Racine, Wisconsin. That year, she responded to a burglary call that led her to a warehouse full of children’s books. She subsequently persuaded the warehouse owner to donate books to share with kids. What started as a program for cops in Racine to distribute books from their cars now consists of 125 reading centers throughout the U.S., as well as Australia, South Africa, Venezuela and the Philippines. 

After learning of the program from Butler, Manteufel spoke with Witherspoon and explained her goal of further expanding the program by initiating a version for Kiwanis clubs.  

“The next thing I did was reach out to the Appleton police chief in my own town,” Manteufel says. “He loved the idea. He immediately assigned an officer to work with me.” 

Manteufel’s own club, the Kiwanis Club of Appleton-Fox Cities, was the first to implement the program. At first, she adds, they did readings online because of the pandemic.  

“As soon as things opened up, it was much more successful going to where the kids are — daycare centers, Boys & Girls Clubs, YMCAs and schools,” Manteufel says. “The Appleton Police Department also knew my plan to expand it district-wide and offered to help any PD in the world that wants to participate.”  

Manteufel invited Butler and Witherspoon to introduce the program at the Wisconsin-Upper Michigan District’s virtual convention in 2020.   

“I had ‘Miss Julia’ as our keynote speaker,” Manteufel says. “People were so moved by her story that in the Zoom chat they all wanted to know how they could help. Then I played my announcement with LeRoy that we had created our own program called Kiwanis ‘n Cops ‘n Kids, and that it was the new governor’s project. The response was fantastic. The attendees took it back to their clubs and since then it has percolated to other clubs.”  

After Manteufel’s year as governor, the district voted to continue Kiwanis ’n Cops ’n Kids as its project for the next five years. 

How your club can use it
For Kiwanis clubs, Manteufel says, the program is a good fit with service projects and programs where kids are expected to attend — such as pancake breakfasts or parks departments’ summer programs.  

Some of the general benefits and advantages: 

  • Each club does its own version of the program in the community. 
  • It can be done by clubs of all sizes.  
  • Clubs can work with Kiwanis International partner Scholastic to get books at a discount.  
  • Clubs can also use gently used books donated by the community. 

 “Maybe your club already has a literacy program,” Manteufel says. “By just tweaking it a bit, and inviting police officers to participate, you can give it a new dimension.” 

If you’re interested in a Kiwanis ’n Cops ’n Kids program for your community, you can find ideas, contact information and more at the program’s website

Club grants span continents 

Club grants span continents 

Kiwanis Children’s Fund grants help clubs start projects that support kids’ health and education.

By Erin Chandler

This March, the Kiwanis Children’s Fund awarded club grants to 12 outstanding Kiwanis club projects that are making a difference across four continents. The following projects highlight the truly international spirit of Kiwanis and show how Kiwanians have addressed the specific health and education needs of kids in Italy, Panama, Austria, Nepal and the United States.  

Bright futures start with a diagnosis
Kiwanis Club of Lalbandi, Kathmandu, Nepal
According to a survey conducted by the Kiwanis Club of Lalbandi, four to five cases of autism spectrum disorder are being diagnosed each day in one Kathmandu health clinic alone. Some children stop attending school as a result. Seeing the clear need in its community, the club is partnering with local autism centers to support kids dealing with this often-misunderstood condition. Club members will receive training to help screen for autism spectrum disorder and assist at therapy centers that provide speech-language, play-based, physical, occupational and nutritional therapies. A grant from the Kiwanis Children’s Fund will help purchase medications and food supplements for those who can’t afford them, as well as software to track patients’ progress. 

A new dining room for a healthy start
Kiwanis Club of Libertad, Coclé, Panama
The Kiwanis Club of Libertad will use a Kiwanis Children’s Fund grant to purchase tables, chairs, eating and kitchen utensils, a refrigerator, an industrial sink, paint and food for the remodeled dining room at Boca de Chiguirí Primary School. Children in the area suffer from food insecurity and often come to school without receiving meals at home. The club is partnering with various government ministries, local companies and others to create a self-sustaining nutrition program that will include vegetable gardens and poultry farming at the school. Once the dining room is structurally safe and furnished, students, parents and teachers will collaborate to bring the program to life. 

Children’s gardens for kindergartens
Kiwanis Club of Mühlviertel, Schwertberg, Austria
The word “kindergarten” means “children garden” — and the Kiwanis Club of Mühlviertel is taking it literally, installing raised-bed gardens at 19 kindergartens in the Perg district of Austria. A Kiwanis Children’s Fund grant will help cover the cost of the aluminum beds. Once the gardens are installed, the “little researchers” will learn how vegetables grow and thrive, how insects pollinate flowers and how fruits and blossoms form — and they will develop a sense of responsibility from caring for the garden. 

A soft room in a safe house
Kiwanis Club of Gallarte, Varese, Italy
A Kiwanis Children’s Fund club grant will help the Kiwanis Club of Gallarte build a Montessori room for children ages six and under living in “protected houses” after leaving dangerous home environments. These children often arrive experiencing severe physical and emotional complications. The room will be painted in “soft colors” to promote tranquility and filled with child-size furnishings, sensory panels, carpets, games, “work” surfaces and more. The club hopes this room will help develop the children’s creativity, intelligence and sensory awareness, setting them on a path for healthy growth. 

Reading in the rain
Kiwanis Club of Malden, Massachusetts, U.S.
Since 2016, the Kiwanis Club of Malden has provided free books to hundreds of local children at its Bubbles and Books event. (It also features a bubble magician for extra fun.) A puppeteer storyteller even takes part to enhance a love of literacy for all kids in this very diverse community, where over 50 languages are spoken in the public schools. Recently, however, the club has had to cancel or reschedule Bubbles and Books due to rain or extreme heat. A Kiwanis Children’s Fund grant will help the club purchase tents for shade and shelter, so kids can choose new books to take home in rain or shine.  

More books, playgrounds and essential supplies
Other projects that received club grants in March include: 

  • Book giveaways from the Kiwanis clubs of Pawleys Island, South Carolina, U.S.; Cicero, Indiana, U.S.; and Literacy in Salinas CA, California, U.S. 
  • A book vending machine from the Kiwanis Club of Lincoln, California, U.S. 
  • Inclusive playgrounds from the Kiwanis clubs of Portsmouth, Ohio, U.S. and Phoenix, Arizona, U.S. 
  • A supply closet for students in need from the Kiwanis Club of Olmsted Falls, Ohio, U.S.  

Apply for a club grant   
The upcoming deadline to complete the first application step for a Kiwanis Children’s Fund club grant has been extended to April 15, 2024! Learn how your club canapply for a grant to help kids in your community. If you have any questions, contact grants@kiwanis.org

How you can help
The Kiwanis Children’s Fund makes grants that improve the lives of children around the world by identifying projects that create a continuum of impact in a child’s life — one that spans their entire childhood and sets them up for a bright future. By funding projects that target the Kiwanis causes — health and nutrition, education and literacy, and youth leadership development — whether through a Kiwanis club’s local service project or a club’s partner, the Children’s Fund ensures that its grantmaking has the greatest possible impact.

If you are interested in extending your and your club’s impact beyond your community, make a gift to the Children’s Fund.