The Morning Call (Sunday)

On Giving Tuesday, he gave 1,085 fire victims $1,000 each

- By Cathy Free

California’s Paradise High School football team had a stellar season, earning the Bobcats a playoff slot earlier this month. But the Bobcats missed the game.

“By then, almost the entire team was homeless,” reported the Los Angeles Times, which detailed how the Camp Fire ravaged the town of Paradise and left about 90 percent of its students without a home.

California businessma­n and restaurant owner Bob Wilson read the story about the teens — about how they scattered with their families looking for roofs over their heads, about how they were regular kids one day and their lives were upended the next. The school shut down. It was uncertain how the seniors would even graduate.

“I felt terrible for them,” Wilson told The Washington Post. “I couldn’t stop thinking, ‘How can I help?’ ”

So he took out his checkbook and wrote a $1,000 check — then another and another and another — 1,085 of them in all. He wrote one for each of the school’s 980 students and 105 teachers, administra­tors, custodians and bus drivers from Paradise High School.

And he delivered them on Giving Tuesday.

“Good intentions are just good intentions unless you act on them,” said Wilson, an 89year-old real estate developer who co-owns a chain of Fish Market restaurant­s and shuttles between homes in Los Angeles and San Diego.

Wilson spent hours in his Los Angeles office stuffing envelopes with checks — worth a total of $1.1 million — and placed them into two suitcases before traveling more than 500 miles to the city of Chico, near Paradise, to hand them out.

He does not otherwise have a connection to Paradise.

Paradise students haven’t been able to return to school since Nov. 8, when the Camp Fire raged through Northern California, killing nearly 90 people, destroying 14,000 homes and sending residents fleeing for their lives. On Monday, students will resume classes in a Chico shopping mall, 15 miles away.

Wilson said he was touched by their story because he imagined himself as a teenager — looking forward to the football playoffs, excited about prom — but then losing everything.

“It’s hard to think of anything more difficult than losing your home and everything you own, especially when you’re enjoying your high school years,” he said.

He thought $1,000 would help students buy new clothes, shoes and laptops, or they could choose to give the money to their parents for gas, groceries and other expenses.

“I decided that if I could just put a smile on their faces and give them the freedom to do whatever they wanted with the money, that would make me happy,” he said.

Wilson’s own teen years were the best time of his life, he said, especially his senior year on the football team at Escondido High School near San Diego.

Raised on a small farm with two siblings, “my high school experience was the first, last and only carefree time I’ve ever known,” said Wilson, who graduated in 1947. “Sports, dances and hanging out. That’s what high school is about.”

Paradise High School Principal Loren Lighthall said he was overwhelme­d by Wilson’s generosity.

“What he’s done Lighthall said.

Wilson handed out the checks Tuesday at a pizza party held at Chico High School. He pointed out that only half of the money came from him; the other half is from his 90-yearold wife, Marion Wilson, who suffers from Alzheimer’s disease.

Students found a letter from Wilson tucked inside their envelopes, wrapped around each check.

The notes read, in part:

“My age would probably place you not as a grandchild, but a great-grandchild if you were part of my family. Please know that you are not alone, as someone as far away as San Diego is rooting for you and has the firm belief that tomorrow will be better than today.” is awesome,”

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 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA/ SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE ?? In total, businessma­n Bob Wilson donated $1.1 million to 980 students and 105 staffers at Paradise High School.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA/ SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE In total, businessma­n Bob Wilson donated $1.1 million to 980 students and 105 staffers at Paradise High School.
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