Kevin Tarpley
Founder · First Community Care Champion I was born and raised in Durham, and I’ve lived within a mile of this community for most of my life. I grew up in Eno Trace, graduated from Durham Technical Community College, and today I live on Horton Road—still rooted in the same city that raised me. Durham isn’t just where I work. It’s where my family is. It’s where my kids are growing up. I’m a father to a one-year-old and a three-year-old, and becoming a parent changed how I see responsibility, leadership, and community. It made the idea of “giving back someday” feel too distant—and replaced it with a sense of urgency to act now. Professionally, I’ve spent my life building systems, solving problems, and leading with integrity. I own and operate an automotive repair business, I’m building an education platform focused on practical, real-world training, and I’m launching Community Care as a nonprofit outreach initiative. Those ventures may look different on the surface, but they all serve the same purpose: To raise standards. To build trust. And to strengthen the community that has given me everything. Community Care was created because I’ve seen what happens when businesses lead with generosity instead of fear—and when neighbors are invited to help instead of being asked to look away. I’m proud to be the first Community Care Champion. Not because I have it all figured out—but because I believe communities are strongest when ordinary people step up, work together, and take care of one another. This is home. And this is my way of giving back.
How did Community Care Champions start?
When Hurricane Helena hit western North Carolina, Champion Tire & Automotive had only been open a few months. We opened our doors in May of 2024, still finding our footing as a new business, still earning trust one customer at a time. Then the storm came through — and it reminded me that sometimes the biggest test of who you are happens when you’re just getting started. Our lower bays took on about six inches of water, but that was nothing compared to what the mountain communities endured. I have family in Spruce Pine, and their home was damaged. They lost power, and my aunt had to drive up from South Carolina to bring them somewhere safe until conditions improved. I couldn’t just watch from a distance. I reached out to the small group of customers who had already trusted Champion Tire in those early months. I sent a simple message asking for food, water, and basic supplies for families who had been hit the hardest. They showed up. Box after box. Bag after bag. People who barely knew me — or the shop — came through because they wanted to help. I packed my Honda Accord with every donation we received. Food, water, supplies — stacked so full there wasn’t room for a passenger seat, and barely room to see out the back window. The first trip ended in Old Fort, where I saw the damage up close. After that run, I came back, gathered more donations, and made a second trip — this time all the way to Spruce Pine, delivering directly to families in need. That experience changed everything. It showed me what happens when one small business and a handful of caring people decide to act — even when they’re new, even when they’re small, even when they’re still trying to survive themselves. When you open a business, your voice suddenly carries farther. And what you choose to do with that voice matters. That’s when I knew Champion Tire & Automotive would stand for more than repairs. It would stand for people helping people. That moment became the foundation of what is now Community Care.
What We’re About
Community Care started with a simple belief: If we can do good while doing business, everybody wins. It began at Champion Tire & Automotive — one shop, one idea, and a community that showed up when it mattered most. But Community Care was never meant to stay inside one building or one brand. This is bigger than Champion Tire. This is a movement. Community Care stands on its own. It doesn’t belong to a company, a church, or a political side. It belongs to people who believe that helping each other still matters. We don’t need speeches. We don’t need complicated programs. We just need people willing to act.
The Heart of the Movement
Every day, we’re reminded of how divided the world feels. Community Care exists to do the opposite. We believe we’re all neighbors — whether we look alike, think alike, or live alike. Everyone matters. Everyone belongs. Our faith inspires us, but we don’t push religion. The love that started this movement is shown through action, not words. We don’t preach. We don’t judge. We just serve.
How It Works
Community Care is intentionally simple. Each Community Care business agrees to offer a real discount on one of their core products or services in exchange for a food or hygiene donation.
- Customers get a deal
- Families in need get food
- Businesses gain purpose
- Communities grow stronger
At Champion Tire & Automotive, we offer $25 off full synthetic oil changes in exchange for a food or men’s hygiene donation. Most customers bring more than required — because once people understand the mission, they want to be part of it. That’s the feeling we’re multiplying.
What's in it for the Business Owners?
1. Visible Community Impact (Not Just a Logo)
Participation directly supports local families, churches, and food banks through tangible donations—not abstract causes. Customers can see and feel the impact their support creates.
2. Trust Through Action, Not Advertising
Community Care partners are recognized for doing good consistently, not just claiming values. This builds real credibility, especially in industries where trust matters.
3. Increased Customer Loyalty
Customers prefer supporting businesses that give back. Community Care businesses become a default choice for customers who value integrity, compassion, and community involvement.
4. Differentiation Without Division
Community Care is non-political, non-religious, and non-divisive. It unites people around a shared goal: helping others. This allows businesses to stand out without alienating customers.
5. Marketing That Feels Right
Partners receive:
- In-store recognition (plaques / decals)
- Website listing as a Community Care Preferred Business
- Social media & community shout-outs
This is values-based marketing, not gimmicks.
6. Stronger Local Business Network
Community Care Champions become part of a trusted local ecosystem—businesses referring, supporting, and standing alongside one another for something bigger than profit.
7. Employee Pride & Culture Boost
Teams are more motivated when they work for a company that stands for something meaningful. Community involvement improves morale, retention, and culture.
8. Simple Participation, Real Results
The model is easy:
- Offer a small incentive (discount, bonus, perk)
- Customers donate non-perishable food
- Donations go straight back into the local community
No red tape. No wasted effort. Maximum impact.
9. Long-Term Reputation Building
Being known as a Community Care Business positions your company as:
- Community-first
- Values-driven
- Trustworthy
- Here for the long haul
That reputation compounds over time.
10. You Become Part of a Movement
Community Care isn’t a one-off promotion—it’s a growing movement built around unity, service, and responsibility. Champions help shape its future and its reach.
Results I've had prioritizing people first.
Still Skeptical
Good. You should be. If you own a business right now, you’ve learned the hard way that most “community programs” sound great on paper and quietly cost you time, money, and energy you don’t have. This is not one of those. Community Care was built inside a real business, under real pressure, by someone who still has to make payroll, keep customers happy, and keep the lights on. There are no memberships to sell to your customers. No scripts to force on your staff. No complicated rules to follow. And no expectation that you give anything away for free. Here’s what actually happens. You choose one product or service that already makes sense for your business. You decide on a controlled discount—one you’re comfortable offering without harming your margins. Customers receive that discount when they bring a non-perishable food or hygiene donation. That’s it. No quotas. No minimums. No pressure. Those donations stay local and visible. They go to families, churches, and food banks in your community—not into a warehouse or a national system where impact is hard to see. From a business standpoint, this works for a few very specific reasons. First, it attracts the right kind of customer. People who participate aren’t price shoppers looking for the cheapest option. They’re values-driven customers who want to support businesses that care—and those customers tend to return. Second, it builds trust faster than advertising ever could. Anyone can claim they care about the community. Very few are willing to tie that claim to action customers can see and participate in. Third, it gives your employees something real to stand behind. When staff can explain why a discount exists—and watch donations stack up—it creates pride, not burnout. That matters more than most owners realize. Fourth, it differentiates you without dividing your customer base. Community Care is intentionally non-political and non-religious. It doesn’t ask customers to agree with anything other than one simple idea: helping people still matters. And finally, it compounds. One business offering one incentive helps a few families. Ten businesses doing the same thing begins to move the needle. A network of businesses creates something far bigger than any one shop could do alone. That’s the goal. Not to create a charity that depends on guilt or constant fundraising. But to build a system where doing good is built into doing business. You’re not being asked to carry this alone. You’re being invited to stand alongside other business owners who are tired of watching communities struggle while feeling like they can’t help without hurting themselves. If Community Care doesn’t make sense for your business, you don’t join. No contracts. No pressure. But if you’ve ever wished there was a way to give back that actually worked—for your customers, your team, and your bottom line—this is it. Still skeptical? That’s okay. Take a look at how it works. See how other businesses are doing it. And decide when you’re ready.
Not a Business owner and want to help?
We want to provide more than short-term relief. Once our system is in place, we hope to encourage enough businesses to make a real difference. Donations will go towards building the non-profit structure, website, events and advertising. We will eventually have staff to help coordinate food pick-up and delivery for the business owners in high demand. Together we can end hunger.
- Kevin Tarpley
- How did Community Care Champions start?
- What We’re About
- The Heart of the Movement
- How It Works
- What's in it for the Business Owners?
- Results I've had prioritizing people first.
- Still Skeptical
- Not a Business owner and want to help?