BOLD NEW APPROACH TO PREVENTING FAMILY AND
COMMUNITY VIOLENCE Gateway Founder Ted Waitt Directs
$10 Million to New Institute
NEW YORK, NY-- June 14, 2005 -- Gateway
founder and former Chairman Ted Waitt today announced
the creation of the Waitt Institute for Violence
Prevention, an unprecedented new operating foundation
dedicated to reducing family and community violence.
Surrounded by athletes and youth, Waitt made
the announcement at a Family Violence Prevention
Fund Founding Fathers event in New York City.
Waitt, who chairs the Founding Fathers Campaign,
has directed $10 million to the new Institute,
positioning it to be a leading organization in
the prevention of violence and domestic abuse.
Ted Waitt’s commitment to stopping domestic
and community violence is not new. Over the past
five years, the Waitt Family Foundation has given
some $7 million to efforts to prevent violence
in our homes, schools and communities. These
earlier violence prevention grants are informing
the approaches the new Institute will take.
“Domestic violence can touch any family
and any community,” Institute Chairman
Ted Waitt said. “Stopping violence is,
quite simply, the greatest challenge facing our
country and our world today. It is the greatest
threat to our public health, the gravest threat
to children, and the biggest obstacle to the
economic development we need to lift up the next
generation. I was lucky. I grew up in a loving
home with caring, compassionate parents. I want
every child to be able to say the same. If we
put resources into this problem, I believe we
can make a real difference.”
For five years, the Waitt Family Foundation,
in partnership with the Family Violence Prevention
Fund (FVPF) and The Advertising Council, has
funded the groundbreaking public education campaign,
Coaching Boys Into Men, to encourage men to help
stop domestic violence. During that time, Waitt
has served as National Chairman of the FVPF’s
Founding Fathers Campaign, which recruits business
executives, community leaders, fathers, uncles,
coaches and others to take a stand against violence.
At today’s event, the Family Violence
Prevention Fund released its Coaching Boys into
Men Playbook. Its premise is that coaches have
a unique relationship with their players, making
them ideal messengers to promote healthy attitudes
towards women and girls. The Playbook is designed
to help coaches deliver messages about treating
women and girls with respect. The Waitt Family
Foundation provided funding for it. Its Father’s
Day launch featured former NBA coach and player
M.L. Carr, New York Giants receiver Amani Toomer
and his father, New York Knicks Head Coach Herb
Williams, and leaders in sports and athletics.
“As a family, we are deeply committed
to helping other families and individuals change
their lives and build stronger futures,” Cindy
Waitt said. “This new initiative is very
important to us and will be a cornerstone of
our work.
Previously, the Waitt Family Foundation has
invested nationally in violence prevention projects
in: Albuquerque; Boston; Newport (Tennessee);
San Diego; Sioux City; and Springfield (Massachusetts).
In San Diego, Foundation grants went to the groundbreaking
Family Justice Center, a "one stop shop" for
victims of family violence and their children;
Becky’s House I and II, transitional homes
for victims of domestic violence; and the San
Diego Domestic Violence Council. In Siouxland,
grants have supported the Mentors in Violence
Program (MVP) run by Dr. Jackson Katz; a relationship
and anti-bullying education campaign in Sioux
City’s high schools and middle schools;
and the Council on Sexual Assault and Domestic
Violence. The Foundation has also partnered with
The Institute for Community Peace, a national
organization dedicated to community-based violence
prevention training, education and outreach.
For more information on the Waitt Institute for
Violence Prevention and its violence prevention
activities, click
here.
The Waitt Family Foundation – Helping
Good People do Great Things
The
Waitt Family Foundation was established by
Gateway Founder Ted Waitt in 1993 and is headquartered
in La Jolla, California. The Foundation relies
on a “Past, Present, Future” approach
to grant making. The Foundation believes that
by understanding the past -- how we’ve
gotten to where we are --we can do a better job
of dealing with our problems today. And by anticipating
what might be on the horizon tomorrow, we can
help prepare for a better world.
More than $360 million has been contributed toward
the Foundation’s efforts, placing Waitt,
as chairman of the foundation, on Business Week’s
list of the 50 most generous philanthropists
in America. The Foundation is led by its President,
John Heubusch.
The Waitt Institute for Violence Prevention
The Waitt
Institute for Violence Prevention is
a private operating foundation committed to researching
the causes
and effects
of violence and to breaking the cycle of violence
in our homes and communities. Working with national
and local partners, the Institute uses a community-based
approach to violence prevention. The Institute
is led by its Executive Director, Cindy Waitt.
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