For more than a decade, Victor Velivis has wondered what would happen to the Utah Diaper Bank once he could no longer carry the load — literally and figuratively. The nonprofit’s founder launched the organization in 2013 and, after retiring in 2017, devoted himself full time to running it on a volunteer basis. Velivis built the diaper bank from the ground up into a lifeline for families across the state. But the work has been demanding. “The pallets feel a little heavier now. The boxes are a little heavier. My knees ache a little bit more,” Velivis told the Deseret News. “Most of our volunteers are older, like me. Finding a way to make this sustainable was the most important thing to me.”