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Corporate Social Responsibility
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1.31.2008 - 12:29pm ET
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Super Bowl Apparel Goes Global: Game Loss is Win for Children and Families in Need
National Football League, Reebok, and Retail Partners to Donate Clothing to World Vision
(CSRwire) January 25, 2008 - It's not whether you win or lose, it's where the shirts
go after the game! No matter which team triumphs in Super Bowl XLII, the
winners will be children in Nicaragua, Romania, and several other
countries. Through a partnership between the NFL and World Vision,
millions of dollars worth of the incorrectly titled, losing team's
licensed Reebok apparel will bring joy to families in extreme poverty.
Since 1994, World Vision has accepted hundreds of official shirts and caps
immediately following football's biggest event. Instead of being
destroyed, the losing team's shirts and caps are shipped from the Super
Bowl host city to World Vision's Gifts-in-Kind Distribution Center in
Pittsburgh, PA. There, they are sorted and added to shipments of other
goods requested by World Vision field staff in various countries. Once
through customs in the destination country, World Vision workers
distribute the apparel to children and families in need, many of whom have
never owned new clothing in their lives.
"The NFL and its partners entrust these goods to World Vision because our
distribution system and long-term presence in impoverished communities
make us a reliable bridge to those in greatest need," said Richard
Stearns, World Vision president. "We offer a tax-deductible, eco-friendly
business solution that brings joy to children and families. And due to the
number of countries in which we work and how we can spread out the
donations, these quantities are not enough to disrupt or undermine local
economies."
"World Vision helps us to ensure that no NFL apparel goes to waste," said
David Krichavsky, NFL Director of Community Relations. "We are pleased to
find a good home for clothing by getting it to those who need it most."
Additionally, World Vision receives and distributes playoff contender
apparel that is unsalable in the United States and is donated by retailers
and manufacturers. These donations include shirts, hats, sweatshirts and
other clothing of teams that advance but are eliminated in the playoffs.
In 2007, the combined value of goods donated by Reebok, Dick's Sporting
Goods, and the Sports Authority was approximately $2.5 million.
After last year's Super Bowl game, a significant portion of the Chicago
Bears apparel was distributed in Zambia in southern Africa. Other
countries receiving Bears shirts included Chad, Chile, Bolivia, Democratic
Republic of Congo, El Salvador, Romania, and Zimbabwe.
World Vision also receives counterfeit NFL team apparel through its work
with United States Customs. The program began in 1991 at the Storehouse
of World Vision through a donation of confiscated goods from Los Angeles
Customs. World Vision disburses confiscated goods and official, licensed
apparel only in pre-approved, developing nations.
About World Vision Gifts-in-Kind
Gifts-in-Kind (GIK) are a company's first-quality, excess inventory
donated to assist those in need, and World Vision provides these goods to
millions of people in need each year. World Vision works in 100
countries, half of which have duty free status to import donations. In
the past five years, World Vision has placed $1.1 billion of donated goods
from major corporations, such as clothing, shoes, medical supplies, books,
school supplies, personal care, sporting goods, and building materials.
About World Vision
World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to working
with children, families, and their communities worldwide reach their full
potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice. We serve all
people regardless of religion, race, ethnicity, or gender. For more
information, visit www.worldvision.org.
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