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Consider This

Trucker Buddy founder’s dream lives on

If you ask a typical fourth-grade student if he or she recognizes the name Gary King, you will probably get a blank stare. But, if you ask one of the children who have been involved in the program to identify their Trucker Buddy, their eyes will light up and they’ll tell you the name of their pen pal friend.
     Gary King will never know the extent of the influence he has had on more than two million children who have had a Trucker Buddy since the program’s inception in 1993. On June 9, after struggling with both cancer and heart disease, Gary passed away in his sleep. His wife, Carol, who was his partner and inspiration, survives. He also leaves behind three children, Sarah, Melissa and David.
     In 1993, while living in Elkhorn, WI, Gary drove a truck leased to Dart Transit (Eagan, MN). He felt a need to share his over-the-road stories with an elementary school class, so he asked a friend, whose wife was a teacher in Williams Bay, WI, if he could correspond with her class. She agreed, and the Trucker Buddy program was born.
     As Gary shared the postcards and letters with his truck stop friends, they asked him how they, too, could adopt a class and help children understand the importance of the trucking industry while alleviating some of the loneliness and boredom they faced on the road. Gary and Carol started matching drivers with schools, and spent hours helping refine the program, which quickly grew to include nearly 5,000 driver student matches.
     In 1994, Kenworth Truck Company boosted the goals of the program with major funding for the nonprofit organization. Throughout that time, Gary continued to drive, while Carol worked tirelessly to match drivers and teachers. Eventually, Gary got off the road to promote the goals of the Trucker Buddy program at trade shows and industry events.
     In 2000, after experiencing health problems, the Kings turned Trucker Buddy over to an executive director, Ellen Voie, who had previously served on its board of directors. Voie, who left the executive director’s post last year, helped grow the program to what it has become today.
     Today, nearly 3,000 teachers and 60,000 children correspond with their Trucker Buddy pen pal. Some drivers, like Leonard “Sand-paper” Emery, have been writing to the same class for over a decade. Many former students have graduated and continue to describe the impact their driver had made in their lives.
     “I was proud to further the goals of Trucker Buddy, and to show Gary and Carol King that their idea had reached a wonderful level of influence in the trucking industry, and for the children and drivers who participated,” says Voie.

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