About two dozen Saint Joseph students, through the high school’s campus ministry, sacrificed their activity time during last week’s Community Day to fill more than a hundred weekend snack bags for our nonprofit to distribute to families of pediatric patients at PSE&G Children’s Specialized Hospital in New Brunswick.

The community service project, which Tracey Coudriet, the high school’s director of campus ministry, orchestrated in conjunction with students and their families, was conducted in honor of our foundation’s namesake.

Students and their families generously donated all of the items contained in the bags, which our foundation’s leadership delivered to the hospital earlier this week.

According to Children’s Specialized Hospital’s Foundation, “Often times, one of the biggest burdens for families while their child is living at our New Brunswick inpatient hospital is feeding themselves during their child’s stay. Families often forget about themselves as they are so concerned with their child’s health, and limited funds really narrow their options. By providing these weekend snack bags, you are ensuring each family who stays with us has one less thing to worry about during their child’s stay.”

The school community collected so much food that The Marisa Tufaro Foundation delivered the significant surplus to the Hands of Hope Food Pantry, an Edison-based nonprofit committed to providing an efficient and centralized system for distributing food to alleviate hunger in the Middlesex County area.

In addition, our foundation’s leadership made a generous monetary donation in honor of Saint Joseph High School to Hands of Hope.

Our nonprofit’s namesake, Marisa Tufaro, is the daughter of longtime Home News Tribune sports writer Greg Tufaro, a 1985 graduate of Saint Joseph High School, and of Cyndi Tufaro, principal at James Monroe Elementary School in Edison.

The Saint Joseph school community has been among The Marisa Tufaro Foundation’s biggest supporters.

Since its inception just over two years ago, The Marisa Tufaro Foundation has donated more than $100,000 while fulfilling its mission of helping pediatric patients and other children in need throughout the greater Middlesex County area.

Our nonprofit has also donated thousands of toys, nonperishable food, winter jackets, baby supplies and other items upon which we have placed no monetary value.

Each weekend snack bag contained a package of Bumble Bee tuna salad and crackers, a microwavable container of Kraft macaroni and cheese, a microwavable container of Chef Boyardee pasta, a microwavable cup of Nissin chicken flavor ramen noodle soup, a Nature Valley protein bar, a bottle of Poland Spring water, a container of Apple & Eve juice, a container of Dole mixed fruit, Goldfish crackers, Handi-Snacks Ritz Crackers ‘N Cheese Dip, a package of Pop Secret microwavable popcorn, a cup of Jiff peanut butter, a package of Blue Diamond almonds, a package of Nabisco Belvita cookies, a package of microwavable Quaker oatmeal, and several other snacks.

The students, faculty and school administrators who packed the weekend snack bags, including principal Anne Rivera, provided utensils, wrapping each set in a napkin and placing it in a Ziploc baggie along with accompanying packets of Bigelow tea and Swiss Miss hot chocolate.

The food items were carefully placed inside reusable cloth bags bearing a logo that united Saint Joseph High School with our foundation. “THE FALCON FLOCK FLIES WITH AN ANGEL TO SUPPORT THE MARISA TUFARO FOUNDATION,” was inscribed beneath the logo. Tethered to the handle of all the bags was a variety of inspirational messages Saint Joseph students selected with love and care for the pediatric patients.

Students and faculty members received specially designed commemorative T-shirts, which they wore while participating in the community service project.

Our nonprofit has a longstanding partnership with Children’s Specialized Hospital, where we have hosted a boardwalk-themed “Family Fun Night” each of the past two summers.

In addition, our nonprofit partnered with Teamwork Unlimited Foundation to provide medical alert bracelets for Children’s Specialized Hospital’s pediatric patients.

Children’s Specialized Hospital recently featured our nonprofit in its annual report.

Marisa, who would have been a junior this year at Edison High School, was born with a complex cardiac defect that required six open-heart surgeries. Despite being hospitalized for more than two years and maintaining hundreds of doctor’s appointments, she lived a vibrant life that inspired. After her sixth surgery, Marisa developed two life-threatening conditions that necessitated a heart transplant. A postoperative complication developed into a rare form of cancer that riddled her brain and body. Marisa succumbed to her illness following a valiant battle on Jan. 30, 2017. She was just 13 years old.

Marisa received outstanding care as an outpatient from Children’s Specialized Hospital, benefiting most recently from physical therapy following her July 2016 heart transplant.

Children’s Specialized Hospital, which annually serves more than 34,000 children statewide at 12 different locations throughout New Jersey, is the nation’s leading provider of inpatient and outpatient care for children from birth to 21 years of age facing special health challenges ranging from chronic illnesses and complex physical disabilities, such as brain and spinal cord injuries, to developmental and behavioral issues such as autism and mental health.

PSE&G Children’s Specialized Hospital in New Brunswick serves approximately 550 pediatric patients annually.

Some of the ways our nonprofit has made an impact are detailed below: