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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
2.19.2008 - 12:00pm ET
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CSR News from:
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Volvo Cars of North America
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Florida's Ten-Year-Old Zach Bonner Named Winner of Volvo's National Hometown Youth Hero Award
Bonner Will Receive $25,000 for the Charity of His Choice
Since 2002, Volvo has contributed nearly $5 million in funding and awards to help real-life heroes continue extraordinary work in their communities
(CSRwire) IRVINE, CA - February 19, 2008 - He's just 10-years old but Zach Bonner has
achieved a lifetime's worth of accomplishments on behalf of children who
are homeless. He's raised awareness, dollars and the spirits of thousands
of kids, and now he is being recognized nationally for his efforts.
Volvo today announced that Bonner, from Valrico, Fla., has been named the
winner of the Alexandra Scott Butterfly Award and will receive a $25,000
contribution to the charity of his choice.
This award was created in 2004 by Volvo Cars of North America to honor
young heroes who do the extraordinary in the areas of Safety, Quality of
Life and Environment in the name of Alexandra Scott, a Volvo for life
Awards winner from Wynnewood, Pa., who passed away at age eight from
cancer. She raised more than $1 million for pediatric cancer research
through lemonade sales and other fundraising activities. Parents Jay and
Liz Scott, Butterfly Award judges, continue promoting Alex's cause and
raising money for pediatric cancer research through their foundation,
Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation. They will also receive a $25,000
contribution for their foundation.
"I am thrilled and so thankful to get the Volvo for life Award," Bonner
said. "I am honored that others think I'm making a difference in kids'
lives. I will use the donation from Volvo to continue to make backpacks
and books available to homeless kids."
More About Zach Bonner
Bonner collected an incredible 27 truckloads of sundry items for Katrina's
homeless shortly after the storm devastated the Gulf coast. A year later,
he collected $600 in donations for Red Cross post-Katrina efforts and then
secured an additional $7,000 worth of new toys and sporting equipment for
homeless children living in Red Cross shelters. This year, Bonner will
hold his second holiday party for some 700 Katrina children still living
in FEMA trailer parks, for which he has already collected more than 500
hams and gift bags. Bonner also recently founded the Little Red Wagon
Foundation, Inc., an organization that collects and donates backpacks
filled with food, school items and other supplies to disadvantaged
children nationwide. When Congress made November National Homeless Youth
Awareness Month, Bonner created an event to raise awareness about homeless
children: a marathon walk from Tampa, Fla. to Tallahassee, Fla. covering
250 miles over 23 days. Through the walk, Bonner and his team raised money
and awareness for the nation's estimated 1.3 million homeless children.
Bonner will receive his award at the Volvo for life Awards Ceremony at New
York City's world famous Cipriani’s 42nd Street on March 19. He will be
honored alongside three other Volvo for life heroes who are:
Quality of Life
Matthew Sanford, Orono, Minn.
Matthew Sanford, 42, was involved in a car crash that took the lives of
his father and sister, and left him paralyzed from the chest down. Now, he
is a nationally recognized yoga teacher, author and renowned expert in
mind-body integration who has inspired and enhanced the lives of
thousands. In 2001, Sanford founded Mind Body Solutions, a nonprofit
organization dedicated to the simple and practical notion that minds and
bodies work better together, offering programs in the workplace, in
corporations, at the yoga studio and in the community at large.
Safety
Marilyn Adams, Earlham, Iowa
In 1987, Marilyn Adams, 57, founded Farm Safety 4 Just Kids and set out on
a mission to promote safe farm environments and eliminate farm-related
child health hazards, injuries and fatalities. Farm Safety 4 Just Kids now
has 137 chapters throughout North America. Through her visits to rural
schools, media appearances, testimony before government agencies and in
Congress, Adams has spread her farm safety message across the country.
Environment
Lorraine Kerwood, Eugene, Ore.
Lorraine Kerwood, 47, established NextStep Recycling. The organization has
recycled more than 800 tons of electronic waste and placed 11,000 computers
in disadvantaged communities in the United States and abroad. More than 500
computers have been shipped to rural Guatemalan schools, orphanages and
non-governmental organizations.
The
Volvo for life Awards, launched in 2002, is the largest-ever national
search for and celebration of everyday heroes in the categories of Safety,
Quality of Life and Environment. Volvo Cars of North America provides $1
million in awards and contributions in honor of heroes. Since the
inception of the program, Volvo has contributed more than $5 million to
help hometown heroes continue their extraordinary work in their
communities.
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