Freddie Mac Foundation and Washington Nationals Team Up to Help Region's 6,000 Foster Children
April 19 2007 - 11:23AM
PR Newswire (US)
Renewed Partnership Recruits Adoptive Families, Raises Awareness at
Home Games WASHINGTON, April 19 /PRNewswire/ -- Eating hot dogs and
cheering for the home team is a pastime shared by many families,
but for more than 6,000 foster children in this region special
outings like these with a family of their own are only a dream.
Last night, the Freddie Mac Foundation and the Washington Nationals
recommitted their joint efforts to help remedy that. The Foundation
and the Nationals will continue a partnership started nearly a year
ago to help recruit adoptive families for more of our region's
foster children as well as raise awareness of their plight. As part
of the renewed partnership, every Wednesday night home game is a
"Freddie Mac Foundation's Wednesday's Child Game," when fans have a
chance to learn more about the plight of foster children and find
out what they can do to make a difference in a foster child's life.
"The Freddie Mac Foundation is in great part devoted to making a
difference in the lives of foster children, and we are excited to
continue to team up with the Washington Nationals to strengthen
this work," says Ralph F. Boyd, Jr., chairman of the Foundation.
"The Nationals realize the importance of our corporate and
community partners, and the Freddie Mac Foundation is one of those
vital partners that enable us to reach out to our surrounding
community and to help us accomplish our goals of creating powerful
community partnerships that improve the lives of children and
families throughout the Washington Capital Region," says Alphonso
Maldon, senior vice president, External Affairs and president,
Washington Nationals Dream Foundation. Wednesday's Child Games
expand on the Foundation's NBC4 television program "Wednesday's
Child," which for 15 years has profiled children in need of
adoption with the aim of finding them adoptive families. The
program airs weekly in Washington, DC as well as Los Angeles,
Philadelphia, New York and Atlanta, and has successfully helped to
find more than 1,000 children permanent homes. In DC, the program
is a partnership between the Foundation, NBC4 and the Council of
Governments. It airs on NBC4 during the news on Wednesdays at 5 pm,
Thursdays at 10 am and Sundays at 9 am, and is hosted by Barbara
Harrison. Children who have been featured on the "Wednesday's
Child" program, as well as other children in need of adoption, are
guests at home games and get to meet a coach, deliver the line-up
card and interact with Screech the mascot. In addition, fans will
have a number of opportunities through in- stadium messaging and
radio promotions to learn about the issue of foster care and how
they can get involved. "This wonderful partnership offers foster
children a memorable and possibly life-changing experience while
reminding our community about the children's need for permanent,
loving homes," says Boyd. This initiative builds on numerous other
Foundation efforts to improve the lives of foster children in the
nation's capital and across the country. Through grants to
nonprofits that support foster children and their families, as well
as sponsorship of public awareness efforts such as National
Adoption Day and the Heart Gallery, the Foundation has invested
millions of dollars to improve the lives of children in the foster
care system. Created by Freddie Mac in 1991, the Freddie Mac
Foundation is dedicated to creating hope and opportunity for
children, youth, and their families. As the largest corporate
funder in the Washington, DC metropolitan area, Freddie Mac and the
Freddie Mac Foundation have invested more than $312 million in
organizations serving the community.
http://www.freddiemacfoundation.org/ DATASOURCE: Freddie Mac
Foundation CONTACT: Patricia Fuentes, +1-703-903-3504, or Shawn
Flaherty, +1-703-903-4384, for Freddie Mac Foundation Web site:
http://www.freddiemacfoundation.org/
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