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PEI

Summerside postal workers honour late colleague with annual food drive

This year's annual Prince County Postal Worker's Food Drive is being renamed in honour of a Summerside postal worker who passed away earlier this year.

Postal workers in Summerside are collecting donations from doorsteps Saturday

Summerside postal worker and respected community member Myles Birch, left, died in February at the age of 67. This year's annual food drive is being renamed in his honour. (Submitted by Scott Gaudet)

This year's annual Prince County Postal Worker's Food Drive is being renamed in honour of a Summerside postal worker who passed away earlier this year.

Over 30 years ago, Summersidepostal worker MylesBirch realizedthere were many hungry families in need and began the annualfood drive.

Birch continued to run the annual postal worker's food drive every yearuntil he diedin February at the age of 67.

"He was a wonderful man, they used to dress him up as Santa Claus and he would go out into the community at Christmas," says Scott Gaudet, a postal worker in Summerside.

"He was really somebody that really cared he was a great mentor to me, he passed the torch on."

Postal workers collecting Saturday

To carry on the life and memory of Birch, Gaudet decided to rename the food drive to the first Myles Birch Memorial Postal Worker'sFood Drive.

"We thought, this year, it would be great to memorialize his death, and what he did for the community, by renaming the food drive," he said.

Postal workers are asking residents from Tignish to Borden to donate food items to their local food bank. Summerside residents can leave non-perishable items on their doorsteps at 9 a.m. on Saturday. (CBC)

People in Summersidecan expect to see Gaudet and the postal worker fleettake to the streets on Saturdayto fill their cars with donations.

"We fill our cars probably twice on each route, so a letter carrier takes his own route and you'd fill the trunk and theback seatof your car probably at least two times."

Donations are also being accepted at post office's throughout Prince County and at the Salvation Army in Summerside.

Expecting around 24,000 pounds in donations

Gaudetis expecting to about24,000 pounds of food in donations.

So far, they've received 4,000 pounds in "early bird" donations, but Friday and Saturday collections are the big draw for food items, he said.

If you're living in Summerside, postal workers are asking for non-perishable donations to be left on your doorstep around 9 a.m Saturday morning.

They're particularly looking for food items for school lunches, such as granola bars andfruit chews, or anything that doesn't have to go in the fridge or freezer.

With files from Laura Chapin