UPDATE: Jim Crockett's memorial service will be held at 12 noon on Tuesday, December 4 at Anchorage City Church, 1301 West 100th Avenue.
The Executive Director of Bean's Cafe died Thursday of pneumonia. Sixty-four-year-old Jim Crockett was one of the founders of the cafe, which provides meals, shelter, and support services for Anchorage's neediest citizens.
Jim Crockett was a founding board member of Bean's Cafe in downtown Anchorage. Leslie Ellis is the Chairwoman of the Board that oversees Beans. She says Crockett's leadership will be missed.
“Bean's started in 1979 and Jim was one of the founding board members and then after his tenure ended as a board member he continued to serve. A little more than 10 years ago the position of executive director became open and he applied and he was of course the perfect fit and we were thrilled – you know Jim is very unique because he was compassionate, he's caring but he was an excellent financial manager,” Ellis said.
Crockett worked in the private sector as an accountant and financial manager before becoming the director of Bean's, Ellis says. He will be remembered, she says, for expanding the work of the cafe. Under Crockett's leadership, Bean's began serving around 800 meals a day, within the cafe, plus 100-200 additional meals at other locations. The Cafe also began providing shelter when the 'Brother Francis Shelter' filled up. One of the biggest things that happened during Crockett's Tenure, Ellis says, is the creation of a sub-program of Beans called “Children's Lunch Box,” which serves over 1,200 kids lunch every day at six locations. Ellis says the Beans staff and volunteers are honoring Crockett by carrying on that work.
“This is a really sad day for us, but our staff and the large number of volunteers that we have every day that make things happen at beans and children's lunch box all were at work today, everybody was working, there was no interruption in service – that would be the one thing that Jim would not want to see happen. And I'm proud to say that it's a hard day, but everybody has stepped up,” Ellis said.
Ellis says because Crockett died so suddenly, a memorial service hasn't been planned yet, but the board is considering ways to honor Crocket and will release information about how the community can remember him soon.