What is Wreaths Across America | WreathsAcrossAmerica.org
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What is Wreaths Across America | WreathsAcrossAmerica.org
Trucker Charity hauling a 'precious' load for Wreaths Across America
Trucker Charity Inc. was founded to help truckers in need but that isn’t all they’re about. President and OOIDA Life Member Lance Wood says, “Part of our mission is to give back.” This year, they’re fulfilling that mission by participating in Wreaths Across America. Lance decided to send the Trucker Charity truck to Maine with driver and Army veteran Tony Hamilton behind the wheel. When Lance gave Tony the news, he was “ecstatic.” When Tony, also an OOIDA member, got to the Worcester Wreath Co. in Maine on Friday, Dec. 7, the original plan was to load his truck with 300 wreaths. When another truck had to cancel, they asked if Tony could take almost 4,000 wreaths instead. Of course, he agreed. He joined a convoy of trucks hauling wreaths from Columbia, ME, to Bangor, ME – an experience Tony said was, “hard to describe … emotional.” “To see the respect of the people standing on the side of the road, waving flags, giving their support, it was unreal,” he said. “For 70 miles it was nothing but people standing on the side of the roads, in their driveways, parking on the side of the road, these two way roads in the middle of nowhere in Northern Maine. It’s an honor as a veteran and as a driver to give back to the community and the trucking business in this way.” Monday he was heading to The Church of St. Denis cemetery in Hopewell Junction, NY. He is also looking forward to stopping at a Vietnam veterans’ memorial in White Plains, NY. Tony said as a veteran this means a lot to him and he is grateful to the people of the Worcester Wreath Co. for honoring fallen heroes in this way. Lance says Wreaths Across America still needs volunteers at to place wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery. Lance and his wife, Kacie, plan to be at Arlington this weekend to help. For more information about Wreaths Across America, click here.
Trucking Industry Starting to Use Dash Cams
STRAFFORD, Mo. -- New camera technology gives truck drivers an extra set of eyes on the road. Semi trucks might seem big and imposing on the interstate, and many commuters might blame the trucker in case of an accident. Along I-44 in Strafford Missouri, 18-wheeled trucks pulled in and out of the TA truck stop every minute. Scott Tibbles watched the scene, his first experience of the US trucking industry. "It seems to be a much bigger industry here, and very different as well," Tibbles said. "You can't really compare it to the UK." At just 21 years old, Tibbles is already an international businessman. His latest business venture is a company called SmartCam Direct. The company manufactures small hi-definition cameras that stick to a car's windshield, and see up everything that happens on the road. Dashboard cameras are becoming increasingly popular in the United States. Many cyclists are attaching similar GoPro cameras to their gear to catch belligerent drivers on city streets. Now truckers are applying the same principle. That's why a former trucker named Bill Gremminger sells the cameras that Tibbles manufactures. "There's a lot of advantages that drivers can have with a camera, especially in transportation," Gremminger said, "to help them out or to help them avoid any illegal ramifications as far as their job is concerned." In other words, the cameras serve as proof in case of an accident. Truck drivers are especially at risk for litigation. They're big and imposing on the roadway, but the cameras show that the driver isn't always at fault. "For the insurance companies it's a massive thing," Tibbles said. "It will save you money, it will save your insurance or your license." The cameras are different than a consumer model like a GoPro. For one thing, they're cheaper, and automatically turn on with a vehicle's ignition. Even so, Tibbles said it's hard to market such a product here. "I don't think it's something that people need over here until it's pushed in their faces," he said. "Over in the UK, you show it to someone and they automatically see the need for it." Gremminger said truck drivers aren't always tech-savvy, but that a camera could protect them against company pressure to drive faster and harder. "Drivers are under a lot of pressure to get there on time or drive in adverse weather conditions," Gremminger said. "Trucking companies are wary because they know that within their company is a pool of drivers who are concerned about their driving habits." According to legalinfo.com, there are nearly half a million trucking accidents every year.
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Charities Raise More Than $174-Million for Sandy Victims
As of Friday, charities have reported raising more than $174-million for relief and recovery efforts in the wake of Superstorm Sandy, which devastated the New York and New Jersey region on October 30.
That’s more than the $136-million that U.S. charities had raised within 10 days of last year’s Japan tsunami and earthquake. But it’s dwarfed by the outpouring that followed the 2010 Haiti earthquake ($380-million 10 days after the event) and 2005′s Hurricane Katrina ($740-million nine days after the storm).
Here are the charities reporting new fundraising totals as of Friday:
American Red Cross: $117-million
Salvation Army: $5.1-million. The figure includes more than $4.5-million in online donations, more than $540,000 through its toll-free fundraising phone number, and $58,000 from its text-to-give program
Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City: $32-million as of November 7.
Robin Hood: more than $11-million for its relief fund
Brooklyn Community Foundation: $1-million for the Brooklyn Recovery Fund
Habitat for Humanity International: $46,000
Brother’s Brother Foundation: $37,791
In addition, Network for Good, which accepts online donations for several charities, including the Red Cross and Salvation Army, says it has processed $3.7-million in gifts.
The following is a sampling of some large gifts and grants made to help storm victims:
PVH Corporation: $1-million. The money will be split among the American Red Cross, the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City, and the Hurricane Sandy New Jersey Relief Fund. The company will match its employees’ donations.
Henry Schein Cares Foundation and affiliates: more than $1-million in cash and health care supplies to local relief organizations and communities affected by the hurricane
Lady Gaga: $1-million to the American Red Cross
Stavros Niarchos Foundation: $750,000 to support communities in Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island. The following organizations will benefit from the money: Safe Space, an organization in Queens that is providing emergency relief to keep families safe in shelters; Citymeals-on-Wheels, which serves elderly and homebound people in Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island; the Brooklyn Community Foundation; the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation, which has provided volunteers in Staten Island and is working to address emergency needs; and the Queens Public Library, whose branches were badly damaged by the hurricane.
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