The Kincaid Group’s Golf Tournament Raises $300K for Nonprofits

Corporate Donations in Action: The Kincaid Group’s Golf Tournament Raises $300,000 for Local Nonprofits

Corporate Donations in Action

On June 23rd, The Kincaid Group hosted its annual golf tournament in Kansas City, a vibrant event that brought together purpose-driven companies and passionate individuals for a day of connection, competition, and generosity. This year’s tournament, in partnership with Cornerstone Companies was held at the beautiful Canyon Farms golf course and was a resounding success.

The result? A staggering $300,000 raised for four Kansas City-area nonprofits—including Giving the Basics.

More Than a Golf Tournament

Set against the beautiful backdrop of Canyon Farms in Lenexa, KS,  the KC Impact Classic wasn’t just about hitting the greens—it was about hitting a new level of community support. With corporate sponsors, player teams, and volunteers all coming together, the day was a shining example of what happens when companies align their values with action.

Throughout the tournament, participants learned about the missions of each benefiting nonprofit and how their involvement would directly support programs across the region. From empowering disabled children, adults and veterans to providing basic hygiene essentials like soap, toothpaste, and deodorant, the impact of this event will be felt by thousands of individuals and families in need.

How Corporate Donations Fuel Change

Corporate donations like those generated through the KC Impact Classic are a vital part of our work at Giving the Basics. Whether it’s financial gifts, in-kind hygiene products, or collaborative events like this tournament, corporate partners help us:

  • Expand into new school districts and shelters
  • Respond to urgent requests from partner agencies
  • Purchase hygiene products in bulk at reduced prices
  • Operate with the consistency and sustainability that monthly needs require

These donations don’t just fill shelves—they restore dignity and give students, seniors, and families the confidence to participate fully in life.

Why Third-Party Fundraisers Matter

The KC Impact Classic is a perfect example of how third-party fundraisers can amplify a nonprofit’s mission.

When businesses or individuals take the lead on planning and executing fundraising events, it expands both our capacity and our reach. These events create new networks of support, generate awareness, and provide donors with engaging, meaningful ways to get involved.

They also free up our team to focus on what we do best: getting hygiene products into the hands of those who need them most.

If your business, church, or community group is looking for a meaningful cause to rally around, hosting a third-party fundraiser is a powerful way to get involved. From golf tournaments and benefit concerts to birthday fundraisers and company-wide donation drives, your creativity fuels our impact.

Celebrating the Kincaid Group

The team at The Kincaid Group has once again shown what true corporate citizenship looks like. Their commitment to lifting up local nonprofits is inspiring—and we’re deeply grateful to have been selected as one of this year’s beneficiaries.

From the engaging day on the course to the incredible generosity of all who participated, the KC Impact Classic proves that when businesses lead with heart, communities thrive.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

If your company is interested in making a difference, there are so many ways to get involved:

 Make a corporate donation
 Sponsor an event
 Host a third-party fundraiser
 Organize a workplace volunteer day
 Launch a product or virtual drive

Let’s work together to make dignity accessible to all.

📩 Contact us at GivingTheBasics.org to learn more about corporate partnerships.

The Summer Essentials: Soap, Dignity, and You

The Summer Essentials: Soap, Dignity, and YouAs the final school bell rings and summer begins, many children feel a wave of freedom. But for families living on the edge of poverty, summer doesn’t mean fun in the sun—it often means losing access to some of the most basic things they need to live with dignity.

At Giving the Basics, we know the school year provides more than lessons and lunch. For thousands of kids, it’s also a quiet but critical safety net—a place where hygiene products are available so they can show up clean, confident, and included. When schools close, that net disappears. But the need doesn’t.

When Clean Becomes a Luxury

Hygiene poverty is a silent crisis. It doesn’t always show up in statistics or headlines—but it shows up in how a kid sits in a room.

It’s the child who stops raising their hand because they’re self-conscious about body odor. The teenager who skips out on their first job interview because they don’t have deodorant or toothpaste. The parent who turns away from a community program because they haven’t had access to shampoo in weeks and feel ashamed.

These aren’t abstract stories—they happen every summer, in every city, and often in silence.

Over the school year, teachers, counselors, and administrators quietly supply kids with hygiene products through programs we support. But in the summer, families are left to fill the gap alone. There’s no classroom drawer stocked with soap. No teacher noticing that a child’s struggling.

And since hygiene products aren’t covered by government assistance programs like SNAP or WIC, families already managing tight budgets are forced to make hard choices: food or toilet paper? Gas money or period products?

What’s Left When School Is Out?

When institutions pause for summer, it’s often community organizations that step up. Food pantries, summer camps, transitional housing, youth programs—they become the new frontline for kids and families trying to maintain normalcy during a season that too often brings instability.

One of those vital organizations is the Police Athletic League of Kansas City (PAL), which offers fun, interactive year-round programs for youth and KCPD officers. Rooted in the belief that all young people deserve the chance to grow, connect, and succeed, PAL provides a wide range of activities—like art club, pickleball, and boxing—that build confidence and motivation while offering strong, positive role models.

Each PAL activity includes a life skills curriculum, and all participating youth are encouraged to maintain a 2.0 GPA or attend tutoring sessions to improve. PAL isn’t just a place to hang out—it’s a space for growth, accountability, and mutual respect between officers and youth.

“Building positive relationships with officers—especially in today’s society—starts at PAL. Some kids wouldn’t go to school, but they’d come to the PAL center.” — (Ret) Sgt. Skip Cox, PAL Executive Director

These aren’t just places for recreation—they’re safe spaces where dignity can be restored. And they rely on something else: us.

Giving the Basics doesn’t take the summer off. Our work ramps up to meet the invisible but very real surge in need. We provide essential hygiene products—no cost, no qualification, no shame—through a web of over 300 community partners, ranging from shelters to city departments.

“One of our PAL kids wasn’t participating in class so his teacher encouraged us to talk to him and he said, ‘When I raise my hands I have pit stains, and that’s embarrassing. I don’t get to shower. I know I smell, and I get bullied. I can’t participate in class because of my hygiene.’ That moment changed everything. We started a $150,000 renovation to the PAL center, creating locker rooms with showers and hygiene products from Giving the Basics available for the kids at any time.” — (Ret) Sgt. Skip Cox, PAL Executive Director

Our Summer Commitment

Hygiene is about more than being clean. It’s about how you’re seen—by others, and by yourself. That truth doesn’t expire in June.

“One bad decision caused by lack of self dignity can snowball into a lot more bad decisions ultimately causing law enforcement to get involved. By stepping in on the front end, providing these kids with essential hygiene supplies, it leads to stronger self dignity and ultimately better decision making.” — (Ret) Sgt. Skip Cox, PAL Executive Director

Here’s how Giving the Basics shows up all summer long:

  • We deliver critical hygiene products like shampoo, soap, deodorant, toothpaste, diapers, period supplies, and more to organizations serving youth and families over the summer months.
  • We work directly with partners filling the void left when school programs end—whether it’s a summer camp for underserved kids, a youth job readiness program, or a transitional housing site for single parents.
  • We engage corporate and community volunteers who pack and sort thousands of products for rapid deployment—because logistics matter when dignity is on the line.
  • We make donating easy and impactful, helping local businesses and individuals turn in-kind goods and financial gifts into real, immediate relief.
  • How You Can Help This Summer

This summer, you can help a kid feel confident enough to show up.
You can help a teen step into their first job with pride.
You can help a parent feel like they’re doing enough for their child.

Here’s how:

Donate — Even $10 can help stock shelves for a local pantry or summer program

Volunteer — Come sort, pack, and deliver hope. Bring your kids. Bring your team. Be the difference.

Learn more — Understand the scope of hygiene poverty, and help us raise awareness. Talk about it. Post about it. Advocate for dignity.

When we give people the basics, we give them the freedom to participate fully in life.
Let’s not let summer be a season of slipping through the cracks.
Let’s make it a season of showing up—for everyone.

All hands in. Always.

What Happens to Your Donated Hygiene Products?

What Happens to Your Donated Hygiene Products?

What if dignity started with something as simple as deodorant?

At Giving the Basics, we believe it can. Because overcoming hygiene poverty isn’t about luxury—it’s about opportunity. It’s about the quiet ways being clean gives you the confidence to show up for life. And it’s about what happens when that confidence is taken away. This is the story of one stick of deodorant. And of the network of people who turned it into something life-changing.

Where It Begins: A Gap That Shouldn’t Exist

Most people don’t realize this: hygiene products—deodorant, soap, shampoo, toothpaste, pads, toilet paper—aren’t covered by food stamps (SNAP) or most government assistance programs.

That means that for millions of Americans, access to hygiene isn’t guaranteed. It’s a luxury expense on a tight budget. When families are forced to choose between rent, food, or hygiene… hygiene often comes last.

That’s the gap Giving the Basics was built to close.

Arrival: From Generosity to Logistics

Our stick of deodorant could come from anywhere:

  • A product partner offloading surplus inventory with purpose
  • A community drive hosted by a local school or business
  • A donor giving financially so we can purchase exactly what’s needed

It all flows to one place: our centralized distribution hub in Kansas City.

Here, hygiene items don’t pile up—they get processed with care. They become part of a bigger system, designed not just to store, but to move. To match need with supply efficiently, equitably, and fast.

The Hands That Move It: Volunteer Impact in Action

Our deodorant doesn’t sit still for long. It enters a rhythm that only works because of people—volunteers who give their time, attention, and energy to make sure these products get where they’re needed.

Some are:

  • Families showing their kids what community means
  • High schoolers learning that service is power
  • Corporate teams trading desks for something more hands-on
  • Retirees who’ve decided their second act is about giving back

At the hub, volunteers inspect, sort, label, and package thousands of products. The work is professional, efficient, and high-impact—but it’s also deeply personal. It’s not just boxes. It’s people in crisis. It’s dignity in a bag.

The Real Heroes: Distribution Partners on the Front Lines

Once packed and ready, our deodorant moves out—bound for the front lines of hygiene poverty.

We partner with more than 2,300 schools, shelters, food pantries, police stations, child welfare agencies, senior centers, and more. These are people and places already embedded in their communities. They know their neighbors. They know the quiet shame of hygiene needs. And they know how to distribute care with dignity.

We don’t ask recipients to prove their worthiness. We don’t create barriers to access. We believe needing help should be enough. This is human infrastructure at work. The kind of network that lifts communities instead of labeling them.

The Last Stop: A Middle School Bathroom. Or a Shelter Room. Or a Job Interview.

Our stick of deodorant finally lands in the hands of someone who needs it.

Maybe it’s a sixth grader who’s been skipping school because classmates tease them for smelling bad. Now they show up every day, raise their hand in class, and start to believe they belong.

Maybe it’s a parent who’s been piecing together travel-size products from gas stations. They can finally walk into work without worrying what coworkers think.

Maybe it’s a woman in a shelter who hasn’t had access to basic hygiene in days. With one small item, she feels like herself again.

That’s the power of hygiene. Clean isn’t shallow. Clean is identity. Clean is readiness. Clean is control in the middle of chaos.

Why It Works: Centralized Distribution, Local Connection

Giving the Basics was built on one mom’s story—on the pain of knowing she couldn’t provide the essentials for her kids. Out of that moment came a model that works:

  • Centralized collection and organization of hygiene products
  • Community-first volunteer engagement
  • Zero-barrier distribution through trusted local partners

It’s simple, sustainable, and scalable. Every product processed, every volunteer hour served, every partner empowered—each one multiplies the impact. And it’s working. We’ve delivered millions of products. But we’re just getting started.

Dignity Is a Chain Reaction. You Can Start It.

Hygiene poverty doesn’t solve itself. It takes people. It takes hands. It takes heart.

When you give a product or an hour of your time, you create a chain reaction:

  • A corporate warehouse clears inventory
  • A volunteer family spends an hour organizing products
  • A school counselor hands a teen a hygiene item
  • That teen shows up to class and begins to believe in their future

We’re not just distributing products. We’re building safety nets for dignity. It all connects. And it starts with you.

So the next time you pick up deodorant, remember: for some, that product is the difference between invisibility and possibility. Let’s close the gap. Let’s give the basics.

May Corporate Volunteers: The Power of Showing Up

H&R Block Volunteers

H&R Block Volunteers: https://www.hrblock.com/

Volunteer. Corporate Donations. Dignity Drive.

This month at Giving the Basics, our warehouse was filled with more than hygiene products—it was filled with purpose. Teams from across Kansas City put aside their job titles and to-do lists to pack dignity into boxes that will soon make their way to schools, shelters, and community partners across our region.

Corporate volunteering this month showed us that showing up is more than a gesture—it’s a statement of values. It’s about building dignity, fostering connection, and doing good that lasts.

Building Something Bigger Than Boxes

From HR professionals to marketing teams, warehouse workers to wealth managers, people came together to do something real. And it made a difference—not only in the lives of those receiving the items but also for those giving their time.

Hallmark Volunteers

Hallmark Volunteers: www.hallmark.com

“I went to grade school with a boy who was constantly teased and bullied for being dirty and smelling bad… Looking back, I’m sure it wasn’t his choice in any way.”
Hallmark volunteer

When we hear stories like this, it becomes clear: hygiene isn’t just about cleanliness. It’s about dignity. It’s about confidence. And sometimes, it’s about getting a fair shot in the classroom, on the playground, or in the workplace.

Corporate Culture with Heart

What stood out this month wasn’t just the volume of work done—it was the heart behind it. Each volunteer brought their own story, their own motivation. Some came with their entire team. Others joined for the first time and left changed.

Scheels Volunteers

Scheels Volunteers: www.scheels.com

“A great reminder to have compassion—you never know what people are going through. We take the basics for granted when they really are so important.”
Treasure Advertising

“I am motivated to volunteer here more often with my family, friends, and my company!”
Mariner Wealth

Royals Wives Step Up to the Plate

One of this month’s biggest highlights? The wives of Kansas City Royals players rolled up their sleeves and got to work—packing a huge amount of inventory that will directly support local families in need. Their enthusiasm, humility, and teamwork were as impressive as any game-day performance.

Royals Wives Volunteer

Royals Volunteers: www.mlb.com/royals/community/foundation

“Thank you for allowing the women of the KC Royals to work with Giving the Basics today! Giving back and serving our community is such an uplifting experience! We will be back!”
Royals KC

Their visit wasn’t just meaningful for us—it inspired the other groups who volunteered that day. It was a reminder that no matter your platform, showing up is what matters most.

What We’ve Done So Far This Month

  • Corporate groups volunteered: 16
  • Individual volunteers: 418
  • Hygiene items packaged: 202,621

Thank you to all the corporate groups who joined us this month!

This Is What Impact Looks Like

Whether it’s a company-wide initiative or a quick team-building outing, volunteering at Giving the Basics creates real results—both in the warehouse and in the hearts of those who serve.

“My heart was changed. I am humbled to be able to support the community. It truly takes a village to survive in this world.”
Blue KC

If you’ve been looking for a way to bring your team together, create a legacy of giving, or connect your work life to a greater purpose—this is your sign.

Ready to Rally Your Team?

We make it easy. The space is clean and accessible, the mission is compelling, and the impact is measurable. And we’re always ready to welcome new groups who want to build stronger teams and a more dignified community.

Host a dignity drive. Volunteer with your coworkers. Become a Sponsor.

Sign up your corporate group today at givingthebasics.org.

Because when we give the basics, we give people the chance to thrive.

Students Volunteer at the Hygiene Hub and Make a Real Impact

Students Volunteer at the Hygiene Hub
Oxford Middle School Volunteers: www.bluevalleyk12.org

When it comes to community service, students across Kansas City are showing up—and standing out. This month, groups of student volunteers turned the Hygiene Hub into a place of joy, purpose, and connection. But they didn’t just come to fulfill hours. They came to serve, learn, and experience firsthand what it means to care for others in meaningful, lasting ways.

Beyond Community Service: Why Students Keep Coming Back

At first, many students come to Giving the Basics to check a box—school service requirements, confirmation hours, or campus involvement. But something shifts when they walk through the doors of the Hygiene Hub. They realize quickly that this isn’t just another volunteer gig. The atmosphere is full of energy, music, and laughter. The work is hands-on and meaningful. Most importantly, they see—sometimes for the first time—how small acts of service meet real, urgent needs.

They sort hygiene products that will restore dignity to someone’s day. They pack boxes that help kids stay in school and adults stay employed. They hear stories of how basic hygiene items—often taken for granted—can be life-changing. And they walk away knowing they were part of that change.

Students tell us that they enjoy the environment, the teamwork, and the impact. Many come back again and again, not because they have to—but because they want to. They discover a sense of purpose, and they leave feeling proud of the difference they’ve made.

Students Volunteer at the Hygiene Hub
St. Elizabeth Volunteers: www.stekcschool.org

This month’s amazing community groups:

St. Elizabeth 8th Grade: These young leaders brought incredible energy and teamwork. They dove into the work with curiosity and compassion.

Oxford Middle School: With bright minds and big hearts, these students reminded us why the future looks so promising.

Down Syndrome Innovations: Their team brought so much joy and dedication to the Hygiene Hub. Every task became a celebration of inclusion and service.

QHR Family Movement: With parents and students serving together, this group showed what family volunteering is all about—building values and bonds at the same time.

Rockhurst University: These college students made a huge impact. One university volunteer shared:

“My previous employer, a local inner-city high school, utilized Giving the Basics. It was a game changer for our students, who often had multiple challenges to face. This allowed them to direct worry elsewhere. Thank you!”

Students Volunteer at the Hygiene Hub
Rockhurst University Volunteers: www.rockhurst.edu

It’s stories like these that make us grateful every day. When students engage with Giving the Basics, they’re not just fulfilling service hours—they’re joining a movement that restores dignity, lifts burdens, and empowers families to thrive.

Want to make an impact, too?

Whether you’re volunteering as a student, with coworkers, or alongside family and friends, there’s a place for you at the Hygiene Hub. Every hour spent here helps restore dignity, ease burdens, and bring hope to someone in need. Join us—and see how something as simple as giving your time can create a powerful ripple of change.

Get involved today — Sign up to volunteer or follow us on Facebook to stay connected.

Teresa Hamilton honored by the Kansas City Royals

On Saturday, May 31st in Kansas City, Missouri,  Giving the Basics Founder and CEO, Teresa Hamilton, was honored by the Kansas City Royals’ in a special moment of recognition in their Buck O’Neil Legacy Seat. ⚾💙

This honor is reserved for individuals who embody the spirit of service, compassion, and community leadership—values that Buck O’Neil championed both on and off the field.

Teresa’s unwavering commitment to restoring dignity through hygiene has touched millions of lives across Kansas City and beyond. From students to seniors, her vision continues to ensure that no one has to go without the basics.

Congratulations, Teresa! We’re so proud to be on this journey with you.

Creative Planning’s Continued Impact with Giving the Basics

Creative Planning supports Giving the Basics

For seven years, Creative Planning has been a cornerstone of support for Giving the Basics. On April 12th, an annual tradition, marked by passion and purpose, saw more than 100 volunteers from Creative Planning come together to package hygiene items—soap, toothbrushes, deodorant, and more—for families and children in need. As we reflect on this milestone, it’s clear this event is more than a day of service; it’s a powerful testament to community, dignity, and sustained commitment.

Creative Planning supports Giving the Basics

Dedication to Dignity

Since 2018, Creative Planning has rallied its team to support Giving the Basics’ mission, helping ensure that no one in the Kansas City area goes without essential hygiene products. Over the past decade, this event has grown into a flagship volunteer effort, with 100 team members now filling the non-profit’s warehouse each spring. Their work directly addresses a hidden crisis: 33% of low-income families lack access to soap, and 42% of students miss school due to hygiene-related insecurities.

Creative Planning supports Giving the Basics

Creative Planning supports Giving the Basics

Royals Wives Roll Up Their Sleeves to Volunteer for Dignity in Kansas City

Royals Wives Volunteer at Giving the Basics
Royals Wives Roll Up Their Sleeves to Volunteer for Dignity in Kansas City

On May 27th, Giving the Basics was honored to welcome several wives of the Kansas City Royals for a hands-on volunteer shift that made a lasting impact.
Gathered around tables in our warehouse, the Royals wives spent their morning cutting bars of soap and boxing up essential hygiene items—simple products that restore dignity, confidence, and wellness to individuals and families across Kansas City.

“The community gives so much to us—by coming out to the games and supporting us,” said Sarah Wacha, wife of Royals pitcher Michael Wacha. “We’re excited for the opportunity to give back by volunteering for this organization that helps so many people.”

Their presence not only brought energy and compassion to the day—it also helped amplify our mission. The event was covered by KMBC 9 News and KSHB Channel 41, spreading awareness about the ongoing need for basic hygiene items in our schools, shelters, and neighborhoods.

Royals Wives Volunteer at Giving the Basics

Why Volunteer?

At Giving the Basics, we know that volunteers are the heart of our mission. Whether it’s sorting supplies, filling orders, or loading boxes for schools, every task helps ensure that no child, parent, or neighbor has to go without soap, deodorant, toothpaste, or period products.

“It was such a fun time to get together and help do good to serve the Kansas City community! I can’t imagine what the people who receive these items go through to have to go without the basics and I am so happy to see a foundation like Giving the Basics to meet that need! I can’t wait to come back!” says Tori Ragans, wife of pitcher Cole Ragans.

Want to Volunteer Like the Royals Wives?

You don’t have to be part of a major league team to help! Whether you’re an individual, a corporate group, or a family looking to serve together, Giving the Basics has meaningful volunteer opportunities for you.