TO A DOZEN COMMUNITY PROGRAMS
Over $350,000 awarded to serve
children, education and environment
WASHINGTON -- December 9, 2010 ? The Board of
Directors of the Mazda Foundation have announced the grant recipients for the
2011 fiscal year (ending September 30, 2011). As the corporate foundation
of Mazda North American Operations (MNAO), the Mazda Foundation has donated
more than $7 million to children?s organizations, educational scholarships,
food banks, environmental programs and disaster relief efforts since 1992.
In FY 2011,
over $350,000 in grants were awarded to 12 organizations that work to enrich
the lives of the members of their respective communities. Grants were awarded
to:
- Clemson University
International Center for Automotive Research, Greenville, SC
- Court
Appointed Special Advocates for Children, Santa Ana, Calif.
- Dillard University,
New Orleans, LA
- Gleaner?s
Community Food Bank, Detroit,
Mich.
- Mission Hospital,
Mission Viejo, Calif.
- Project
Access, Newport Beach,
Calif.
- Second
Harvest Food Bank, Irvine,
Calif.
- Shoes
That Fit, Claremont, Calif.
- Start
the Adventure in Reading, New Orleans, LA
- Student
Conservation Association, Charlestown,
NH
- University of North
Carolina at Pembroke, Pembroke, NC
- Youth
For Understanding, Bethesda,
MD
?We?re proud
that the Foundation is able to give back to the many communities in which we
work and live,? said Jim O?Sullivan, president and CEO of MNAO and Chairman of
the Mazda Foundation (USA), Inc. ?By supporting innovative and dynamic
organizations we are able to successfully take on the challenges of today and
lay the foundation that will underpin a brighter future for tomorrow.
The
Clemson
University International
Center for
Automotive Research (CU-ICAR) is a state-of-the-art education program in
the Southeast that focuses on automotive research and other transportation and
advanced manufacturing issues. As part of the partnership, the Mazda Foundation
supports the CU-ICAR / Mazda Annual Graduate Fellowship Program, from which
three fellowships are provided to graduate students majoring in automotive
engineering at the university. The fellowships are performance-based and
renewable for up to three years.
Funding for Court
Appointed Special Advocates for Children (CASA) provides crucial training
and supervision for volunteers who will give one-one-one support and advocacy
to 640 abused and neglected children in Orange County
every year. The partnership with the Mazda Foundation results in over 1,300
volunteer hours devoted to improving the lives and futures of these vulnerable
children and teens.
Dillard University, a private, liberal arts,
Historically Black College or University, located in the heart of New Orleans, Louisiana,
has partnered with the Mazda Foundation since 1998 to fund the Mazda Scholars
Program which provides scholarships to students who are majoring in Business
and International Business.
In light of
Mazda?s operations near Detroit and the area?s high unemployment rate (over
14%), Gleaners Community Food Bank receives Mazda Foundation funding for
the first time in FY 2011. Last year, Gleaners distributed more than 36 million
pounds of emergency food to over 484 partner soup kitchens, shelters and
pantries in Wayne, Oakland,
Macomb, Livingston and Monroe counties. Of every dollar donated,
Gleaners uses 96 cents for food and food programs. One dollar provides three
meals for a hungry resident.
Located in Mission Viejo, California,
the Mission
Hospital provides
patients with high quality, accessible and affordable medical and surgical care
along a continuum, as well as wellness and health promotion programs for the
entire community. Contributions from the Mazda Foundation will be used to
fund the addition of two new operating rooms to meet the surgical demand at the
hospital.
The Project
Access After-School Tutoring and Enrichment Program in Orange County
targets school-age youth by providing after-school tutoring / homework help,
computer and Internet instruction / access, educational games, reading groups
as well as productive enrichment activities, e.g. arts and crafts, physical
activities, healthy snacks, character education, teen activities, service
projects and field trips. Contributions from Mazda go toward after-school
homework help supplies, youth enrichment activities, field trip expenses, and
upgrades of the computer labs.
Second
Harvest Food Bank of Orange County,
CA, collects food and distributes it to more than 385 local member charities.
These non-profit agencies include senior centers, rehabilitation centers,
shelters, church pantries, homes for abused children and many other emergency
assistance organizations. The Mazda Foundation?s funding specifically
helps initiatives designed to alleviate hunger and malnutrition among the elderly,
a program designed to curb the effects of malnutrition experienced by children
living in poverty, and a holiday project created to provide traditional holiday
meals for those who would otherwise go without.
Operating out
of Claremont, CA, Shoes That Fit helps build the
self-esteem of low-income schoolchildren by providing them with new shoes and
clothing so that they can attend school in comfort and with dignity. Since
1992, Shoes That Fit school programs in over 750 schools nationwide have
delivered new shoes and clothing items to nearly 500,000 children. In Southern California where Mazda?s headquarters is
located, more than 30,000 schoolchildren in need have received new shoes and
clothing.
More than 238
second grade students from 33 public elementary schools in the greater New
Orleans area receive free one-on-one tutoring in reading through Start The
Adventure In Reading (STAIR). The Mazda Foundation?s grant will allow STAIR
to continue to provide greatly needed educational assistance to children in New Orleans. STAIR
student/volunteer teams read together, play world games, practice phonics and
write stories following a specially designed curriculum to bring the student up
to their grade level in reading.
In order to
demonstrate the Mazda Foundation?s commitment to environmental preservation, a
partnership was forged with the Student Conservation Association in 1998
to create the Mazda "Save Our American Resources" (SOAR) program.
Through SOAR, Mazda sponsors a natural or cultural resource assistant at a national
park, forest or monument in each of the 50 states. Resource assistants provide
services ranging from trail maintenance and protection of endangered species to
guided historical monument tours. Since the SOAR Program was initiated, 600
college-age SOAR interns have provided needed staff support at over 150 natural
resource management sites in all fifty states and the District of Columbia. SOAR Interns have
completed more than 410,000 hours of service on our country?s public lands.
The University
of North Carolina at Pembroke (UNCP) is a comprehensive, multi-cultural
institution with a long and rich history of providing excellent education to
minority groups and other disadvantaged students. More Native American
students attend UNCP than any other educational institution east of the Mississippi River. Five Native American students
majoring in Business Administration have been awarded four-year, full-tuition
Mazda Scholarships. The Mazda Scholarships are the first full tuition, room and
board scholarships ever given by a corporate foundation to the university.
For more than 20
years, Mazda has been promoting cross-cultural relations between the U.S. and Japan through its contributions to Youth
For Understanding. Mazda scholarship funding provides an opportunity for 10
high-school aged students to spend six-weeks in Japan each summer. Each year, half
of the scholarships are given to children of MNAO employees or Mazda dealer
employees. The remaining scholarships are awarded based on a nationwide
competition open to all high school students. Students live for six weeks with
a Japanese host family, learn to speak and write Japanese, and immerse
themselves in daily life.