Mandi Simon has been to more birthday parties than the average 11-year-old in Minnesota.
That's because she is the founder of Simon Says Give, a nonprofit organization that gives birthday parties and school supplies to low-income children. Her charity has been so successful that the Jefferson Awards Foundation, a national organization that recognizes youth leadership and problem solving, named Mandi one of its 2015 GlobeChangers.
"I knew I wanted to help kids, but I wasn't sure how," said Mandi, a sixth-grader at Convent of the Visitation School. "Since my birthday was coming up, I thought of birthdays."
Simon Says Give offers two kinds of parties: in person parties, which are hosted at community organizations like the YMCA, and parties in a box, which are given to local shelters. The nonprofit provides a cake or cake mix and two presents. One gift is something practical like a coat, and the other is purely for fun.
The group has provided 500 birthday parties so far and hopes to fund another 500 parties in 2015.
"I really like getting to see the faces on kids when they have a birthday," said Mandi, who has become friends with some of the families she's met through the program. "I wanted to give them a birthday party or at least a few hours to celebrate themselves."
And while Mandi's dream for Simon Says Give started with birthday parties, it's the group's school supplies initiative — High Five for Supplies — that has really taken off.
Each summer, Simon Says Give puts collection bins in businesses across the metro where people can donate new backpacks and school supplies. The charity also collects money and buys supplies directly. Last year, High Five for Supplies gave supply-stuffed backpacks to 10,000 Minnesota students.