Todd Bernstein is the longtime organizer of the Day of Service event, which he said has continued for 27 years with more than one million volunteers over that span.
“This is not just the first day celebration. It’s about making Dr. King’s legacy of racial and social justice our mission to not just one day, but every day,” he said. “Dr. King was a man of action, 365 days of the year. He knew that to achieve fundamental change, to promote justice that had to be done every day and the King Day of Service serves as a springboard to ongoing community involvement.”
Bernstein said giving out masks, and providing COVID-19 testing and vaccines to people who need them is an extension of King’s work.
State Sen. Vincent Hughes also called on people to step up and register people to vote.“Young people in high school, say to your high school, college classmates, register the votes,” he said. “Vote.Pa is the simplest and easiest way to do it, but do that. Let’s turn this dream into power, and let’s turn that power into change. Change for the people that we care about change with the people that Dr. King died for.”