Something small just happened.
And it means everything.
The very first need was posted on CU I Do by Mt. Zion Indianapolis Credit Union - a tiny, faith-based credit union with just 248 members and $1.3M in assets.
They didn’t ask for much.
Just four chairs.
Total cost: $298.
And within days, those chairs were spoken for.
FORUM Credit Union, a $2.3B credit union in Indiana, stepped up without hesitation.
Their CEO, Doug True, said it best:
“We are supportive of the CU IDO registry and hoping this first request fulfillment helps spur further support and activity.”
That’s it.
That’s the movement.
But to understand why this matters, you have to go back to the beginning.
CU I Do was inspired by a story that is rare in the movement today - the story of a de novo credit union.
A brand-new charter.
A CEO who is also employee number one.
A leader so committed to serving their community that they max out personal credit cards just to open the doors.
A laptop.
A printer.
A desk.
The basics.
Individually, none of it is expensive.
But together? It’s overwhelming.
And it raises a simple question:
What if they didn’t have to do it alone? What if we built a bridal registry for small credit unions?
That’s where CU I Do comes in.
Not as charity.
Not as a handout.
But as a living expression of Cooperative Principle #6: Cooperation Among Cooperatives.
Because small credit unions don’t fail from lack of passion.
They don’t fail from lack of purpose.
They struggle under the weight of a thousand small needs that add up.
And here’s the truth:
For a $2.3B credit union, $298 is nothing.
But for a $1.3M credit union?
It’s four chairs.
It’s dignity.
It’s a place for members to sit.
It’s a signal that someone sees them.
This is how we build something bigger.
One need.
One response.
One relationship at a time.
Today, it’s four chairs in Indianapolis.
Tomorrow, it could be a copy machine in New Mexico.
A laptop in Louisiana.
A lifeline for a credit union that refuses to give up on its community.
CU I Do isn’t just a website.
It’s a reminder.
That “people helping people” was never meant to be a tagline.
It was meant to be a system.
And now it is.
See the needs or support one today:
https://www.creditunionido.com/needs

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