All Volunteer, All Heart from Binky Patrol

Susan Finch - Binky Patrol

This show is about the ability to run a non-profit from the heart with a sense of humor and still be successful. We interview our volunteers, partners, and other non-profits to learn from each other, and support each other as we bring love and hope to our communities. Binky Patrol is a 100% volunteer grassroots 501c3 founded in 1996. Binky Patrol makes blankets and gives them away to children and teens in need of a reminder that they matter, are not invisible and that someone cares. We give to children who are ill, abused, or in trauma.

  1. May 19

    EP94: New Chapters, Big Hearts, and a Milestone June

    Five new Binky Patrol chapters have launched — St. Marys, Georgia; Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania; Janesville, Wisconsin; Sharon, Wisconsin; and a drop-off location near Oregon State University in Corvallis. Pennsylvania's newest chapter made 86 blankets at their very first Binkathon, with a football team and student volunteers showing up to help. June 20th marks Binky Patrol's official 30th anniversary — the date a shout-out on the Oprah Winfrey Show in 1996 turned a 30-day-old Laguna Beach group into a national organization, triggering 800+ calls in 48 hours. Some of those original chapters are still active. Oregon volunteers: storage cleanout is this Saturday. Fleece, flannel, cotton, batting, and soft washable yarn only. No stretchy fabric, no sheer curtains, no burlap. The October Binkathon is open to all chapters. Find yours — or start one — at binkypatrol.org. [00:00:00] Welcome and new chapters overview [00:00:26] New chapter — St. Marys, Georgia (Latoya Wertz, St. Mary's Senior Activity Center) [00:00:49] New chapter — Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania (Pamela Scandale, 86-blanket first Binkathon) [00:01:12] New chapter — Janesville, Wisconsin (Dylan Thomas, Bodacious Brew Coffee Shop) [00:01:32] New chapter — Sharon, Wisconsin (Sherri Farning) [00:01:52] New chapter — Corvallis, Oregon drop-off near Oregon State University (Rania, Ryan, Zoe) [00:02:14] Mr. Ballen Grant and private donation funding social and chapter growth [00:02:45] Oregon storage unit cleanout — this Saturday; fabric needs [00:03:30] June 20th 30th anniversary preparation [00:03:41] The 1996 Oprah Winfrey Show mention and what happened next [00:04:06] 800+ calls in two days; original chapters still active [00:04:41] Mission — blankets as a reminder that kids matter [00:05:01] October Binkathon — find or host an event at binkypatrol.org [00:05:18] Final call to action — join, volunteer, start a chapter

    6 min
  2. Apr 8

    EP93: From 27 Kids to 2,000: How Experience Camps Grows a Grief Sanctuary

    When Liza Buck followed a stranger's car down a dirt road into the Maine woods as an 18-year-old, she had no idea she was headed to a grief camp. She thought she was going to lifeguard. That accidental detour became her life's work. Liza is now on staff full time at Experience Camps, a nonprofit founded in 2009 that provides free week-long programs for children who have lost a parent, sibling, or primary caregiver. What started with 27 kids in Maine now serves nearly 2,000 children a summer across 16 programs in 8 states. In this conversation, Liza and Susan talk about what grieving children actually need, why the first question you ask matters more than almost anything else, and how a camper's fishbowl analogy captures something most adults spend years trying to articulate. They also talk about anger as a legitimate part of grief, the value of saying the words "death" and "dying" out loud, and what it looked like when a Binky Patrol blanket showed up on a 30-degree May night in Connecticut. Liza shares how volunteers can get involved, where camps are located, and what families need to know about applying. experiencecamps.org binkypatrol.org Liza Buck Liza has been a teacher, CAD counselor, and has been involved with Experience Camps since 2014, beginning as a bunk counselor and then operating as the Program Director for Experience Camps in California. In addition to her teaching degrees, she earned her MSW at the University of Maine and is a licensed master social worker. Liza has a passion for kids and mission-driven work which is why Experience Camps feels like “home.” When she's not doing "the best work ever," you can find her with her dog or baking cookies.   Liza Buck, LMSW  Senior National Camp Manager (she/her)  (207) 554-0348  liza@experiencecamps.org experiencecamps.org | @experiencecamps

    23 min
  3. Mar 18

    EP92: March 2026 Update - Tornados, Seniors, Bink-A-Thons

    In this update episode, founder Susan Finch shares what Binky Patrol chapters are doing right now, from sending handmade blankets to tornado victims in Illinois and Indiana (in partnership with Reach Out Worldwide) to launching the Active Seniors campaign, expanding Greek life events in Connecticut and Oregon, and preparing for Bink-A-Thon in October. The official 30th anniversary lands on June 19th — the date Binky Patrol went national, time zone by time zone, when it appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show for National AIDS Awareness Day. Susan gives a shout-out to author Jennifer Chiaverini, whose book Round Robin from the Elm Creek Quilts series is part of their celebration reading list. The Bink-A-Thon, sponsored by the Mr. Ballen Foundation, is ramping up. And Mr. Ballen himself is heading out on a live storytelling tour this summer — including a stop in Portland, which happens to land right around the 30th anniversary date. Susan also breaks down all the ways to get involved: become a chapter, host a one-time event, or set up your business as a drop-off location — with your logo, your info, and your choice of where local blankets get delivered. One volunteer hour a month. That's all it takes. Learn more and get involved at binkypatrol.org Links Referenced in This Episode binkypatrol.org — Binky Patrol main site binkypatrol.org/active-seniors — Active Seniors campaign binkypatrol.org/greek-life — Greek life campaign roww.org — Reach Out Worldwide (tornado relief partner) ballenstudios.com — Ballen Studios (live storytelling tour dates) mrballen.foundation — Mr. Ballen Foundation (Bink-A-Thon sponsor) tvctv.org — TVCTV (local community cable, PSA submissions)

    7 min
  4. Mar 5

    EP91: From Cribs to College — Serving the Kids Nobody Sees

    What does a wet diaper, an empty sippy cup, and a blanket in a backseat have to do with a warehouse full of hope? Everything.   Susan Finch sits down with Stacy DeWitt, Executive Director of James Storehouse in Newbury Park, California — and it turns out they’ve been serving the same kids all along. The connection? Carolyn Berndt, one of Binky Patrol’s All Volunteer – All Heart directors, who also works with Stacy at James Storehouse. “The number one comfort item — from toddlers to teenagers — no matter the season, is a handmade blanket.” — Stacy DeWitt Stacy shares the raw, real story of how a year of prayer and fasting led her to foster care — and how one phone call from a police officer, one three-year-old in a wet diaper, and one blanket from the backseat of her car became the spark that launched James Storehouse in 2014. “Some of the kids have never celebrated their birthday in their entire life, and they’re 22 years old.” — Stacy DeWitt Stacy reveals the number one item every foster child asks for — no matter the age, no matter the season — and it’s exactly what Binky Patrol has been making by hand for 30 years. She also walks us through Beautiful You, an annual event designed to give teen girls rescued from trafficking something they’ve rarely experienced: safe touch, dignity, and the feeling of being seen. This episode will make you want to pick up a needle, some yarn, or your checkbook — and do something. Resources mentioned: James Storehouse: jamesstorehouse.org  Beautiful You: jamesstorehouse.org/beautiful-you-2026 Binky Patrol: binkypatrol.org  Volunteer or take a tour: jamesstorehouse.org/volunteer

    37 min
  5. Feb 10

    EP89 Renewed Purpose: Seniors Bring Joy to Children Through Blankets

    When Cheryl Bean's friend mentioned her mother was moving into a senior community, she saw an opportunity that would change everything. What started as helping one resident who loved to sew has grown into a beautiful movement across Texas retirement communities. In this heartwarming episode, Susan sits down with Cheryl Bean, Area Coordinator for Binky Patrol's Texas chapter, to talk about something special: bringing the joy of giving to senior communities. It's not just about making blankets (though that's wonderful too). It's about giving residents purpose, community, and the chance to use their talents to help children in crisis. Cheryl shares creative ways seniors are contributing—from traditional crocheting and quilting to coloring fabric squares like they're kids again, braiding dog toys from fleece scraps, and creating "stripy blankets" when arthritis makes other crafts difficult. These aren't just activities; they're lifelines of connection. You'll hear stories that'll make you smile: the 94-year-old who lights up when coloring blocks, the lady who came with a hundred baby hats and left learning to make full blankets, and the family who showed up grumpy but now returns every year. This conversation is about more than crafting. It's about dignity, community, and the truth that we all need to contribute something meaningful—no matter our age. Whether you're looking to engage seniors in your area or simply want to hear how Binky Patrol is building bridges across generations, this episode will inspire you to think differently about what's possible. Visit Cheryl's chapter page here.

    26 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

This show is about the ability to run a non-profit from the heart with a sense of humor and still be successful. We interview our volunteers, partners, and other non-profits to learn from each other, and support each other as we bring love and hope to our communities. Binky Patrol is a 100% volunteer grassroots 501c3 founded in 1996. Binky Patrol makes blankets and gives them away to children and teens in need of a reminder that they matter, are not invisible and that someone cares. We give to children who are ill, abused, or in trauma.