Orangewood is real winner of Toshiba Senior Classic
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June Casagrande
On a gorgeous green golf course, a who’s who of the charity circuit
rubs elbows with world-renowned golfers. At the same time, scattered
throughout the region, hundreds of young people outgrowing foster
care face a frightening world alone.
But thanks to the Orangewood Children’s Foundation, some of these
young people will enjoy a bit of comfort and support from
participants of the well-heeled Toshiba Senior Classic.
For three years running, Orangewood has been one of the charities
that benefit from the golf tournament. Though Hoag Hospital is the
best-known beneficiary of the annual pro golf event, some smaller
charities also get a needed boost.
“What it does is it helps us provide services to foster youth who
are leaving the foster care system,” Orangewood Executive Director
Gene Howard said. “As you know, kids that leave the foster care
system don’t have parents to care for them. We provide housing, jobs,
education, we have a very large scholarship foundation. We’ve helped
over 200 former foster youth at colleges and universities across the
United States, and these dollars help us help these kids realize
their dreams.”
In 2001 and 2002, Orangewood received $45,000 from the Toshiba
Senior Classic -- enough to send eight former foster children to
college for four years.
“We have partnerships with local colleges that match the money we
put in, so it turns out to be enough to cover full tuition, books,
housing and expenses,” Howard said.
The golf tournament is the most lucrative charity event on the PGA
Champions Tour. In the last five years, the Toshiba Senior Classic
has donated more than $4.7 to more than 20 different charities. Last
year, it became the first event on the tour to raise $1 million for
three consecutive years.
Most of that money goes to Newport Beach’s Hoag Memorial Hospital
Presbyterian, which has been the organizer of the event since 1996.
Last year, the hospital took in just more than $1 million in
proceeds, all of which went to building the hospital’s Women’s
Pavilion. This year, organizers hope to match that amount.
“It’s been really important to the community fund-raising process
for the Women’s Pavilion,” Hoag Vice President Peter Foulke said.
On top of that, the Toshiba Senior Classic Scholarship Fund gives
$2,000 and a Toshiba computer to 12 Orange County students. The
Explorer Scouts of Orange County, the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation of
Orange County, the J.F. Shea Therapeutic Riding Center, Boy Scouts of
America, UCI Athletics, L.A. Conservation Corps and the Corona Del
Mar High School Golf Team also benefit from the event.
“I think it’s a real testament to the altruism of golfers,” Howard
said.
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