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Nissan Foundation awards $700,000 to 27 nonprofits to support building inclusive communities

The Nissan Foundation today announced its board of directors has awarded $700,000 in grants to nonprofits in seven states to support innovative programs that break down societal barriers and build inclusive communities through education and outreach. The Nissan Foundation has awarded more than $9.3 million to date. The grants will fund 27 projects, including Jobs … Continued

The Nissan Foundation today announced its board of directors has awarded $700,000 in grants to nonprofits in seven states to support innovative programs that break down societal barriers and build inclusive communities through education and outreach. The Nissan Foundation has awarded more than $9.3 million to date.

The grants will fund 27 projects, including Jobs for Mississippi Graduates, a drop-out prevention program, which helps support job attainment, job survival, leadership development, life survival skills, economic empowerment and cultural diversity; the Oasis Center “Building Bridges” program, which serves 300 Nashville youths annually with anti-discrimination/anti-violence programming at schools; and the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants “Neighbor-to-Neighbor Project,” which provides school programs, employer training and workshops on social services for Iraqi immigrants in Detroit.

“The organizations and projects selected for 2016 represent those who provide culturally diverse and relevant programs in communities where Nissan operates,” said Scott Becker, president of the Nissan Foundation. “The Nissan Foundation is proud to support their missions to enrich people’s lives and open doors to new ways of understanding our neighbors and the world we live in.”

The Nissan Foundation was founded in 1992 after three weeks of violent civil unrest occurred near the headquarters for Nissan’s U.S. sales operations then in Southern California. The Foundation was created as a thoughtful response to a societal need that still affects communities today – supporting local organizations that promote the value of cultural diversity in American society and foster greater social and racial equality.

Diversity has remained a core value of Nissan. Thirty-eight percent of Nissan’s U.S. customers are ethnically diverse, the highest among major automakers in the U.S.

This year, the Foundation reviewed 33 proposals from nonprofits located in Southern California, North Central Texas, Middle Tennessee, Central Mississippi, Eastern Michigan, and the New York and Atlanta metro areas. Grant recipients promote cultural diversity across a variety of arts, education, social and public programs.

2016 Grant Recipients

California

Georgia

Michigan

Mississippi

New York

Tennessee

Texas

https://www.automotiveworld.com/news-releases/nissan-foundation-awards-700000-27-nonprofits-support-building-inclusive-communities/

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