Ford Donates Vehicles to DAV, Strengthens Efforts to Assist Disabled Veterans and Honor Their Service
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- Ford Motor Company continues its long-standing relationship with DAV (Disabled American Veterans) by donating seven vehicles to the DAV Transportation Network
- Ford continues to invest in DAV scholarships and the Winter Sports Clinic, and adds support for DAV 5K events to honor veterans and raise funds for needed services
- Since 1974, Ford Fund has contributed nearly $9.3 million to veterans organizations
DENVER -- August 7, 2015: – Ford Motor Company is donating seven Ford
Flex utility vehicles to the DAV, extending a strong relationship that has
assisted disabled military veterans for 93 years.
The vehicles will become part
of the DAV Transportation Network that enlists volunteer drivers to take
sick and disabled veterans to VA medical centers across the country. They
will be deployed to DAV locations in Little Rock, Arkansas, Iowa City,
Iowa, Iron Mountain, Michigan, Omaha, Nebraska, Portland, Oregon, Salt Lake
City, Utah and Seattle, Washington. Since 1996, Ford has donated 199 vehicles to the DAV
fleet.
“Transportation and community service are two important areas
where Ford excels,” said Jim Vella, president, Ford Motor Company
Fund and Community Services. “We are proud to be able to help these
heroes of freedom get the critical services they need to make their lives
better.”
In addition to the new Ford Flex vehicles, Ford Fund,
the philanthropic arm of Ford Motor Company, is sponsoring DAV 5K walks
this fall in Atlanta, Cincinnati and San Diego. Ford Fund also is
continuing support for the Jesse Brown Memorial Youth Scholarship Program,
which provides scholarships to deserving young men and women who have
generously volunteered their time to help disabled veterans in their
community.
This past spring, Ford supported the DAV Winter Sports Clinic in
Snowmass Village, Colorado. The company will again partner with Project
SNAP to engage veterans and the public to draw messages of thanks to active
military members that will become part of this year’s Operation
Grateful Nation mural. The artwork from last year’s event is
currently on display at the Pentagon.
“We are extremely proud
of our long partnership with Ford Motor Company,” said DAV National
Commander Ron Hope. “Ford is an American institution and we’re
grateful they continue to support the men and women who preserve the
American way of life we hold sacred. Without this donation many of these
veterans would go without the medical care they earned.”
Ford Motor
Company and the DAV have been working together to help the nation's wounded
military veterans since Henry Ford organized a cross-country caravan of 50
Model T vehicles to take disabled veterans to the 1922 DAV national
convention in San Francisco.
Ford’s support for veterans continues to
evolve to meet their changing needs. Earlier this year, Ford collaborated
with National Veterans Transition Services, Inc. on the Freedom’s
Sisters REBOOT Workshop that helped women veterans address the unique
challenges they face transitioning out of the military.
Ford Fund also
sponsors Honor Flights to transport World War II veterans to the National
World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C. and featured a special salute to
the nation’s military called Focus on Freedom during this
year’s Ford Fireworks in Detroit. The event included a special
reception for veterans and their families, plus a thrilling flyover by
vintage World War II-era planes.
Since 1974, Ford and Ford Fund
have provided nearly $9.3 million to veterans’
organizations.
Ford today employs more than 7,000 veterans plus
hundreds of active military personnel, reservists and guardsmen.