Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

TELUS Is Giving An Unprecedented $120 Million To Help Vulnerable Youth Reach Their Full Potential

Darpan News Desk, 24 Oct, 2018 12:28 AM
    Vancouver – TELUS announced it is giving an unprecedented $120 million, launching the TELUS Friendly Future Foundation, an independent charitable organization mandated to address the social and economic challenges facing Canada’s disadvantaged youth. This inaugural endowment is the largest donation made by a publicly traded Canadian company in history and one of the largest ever in North America.
     
     
    Across Canada, 1.5 million children go hungry without access to nutritious food every single day; 350,000 young people are in government care and, lacking the support of a family, often experience trauma and an isolating transition into adulthood; 30,000 Canadians, many of them young people, are homeless on any given night and lack vital access to healthcare; and 40 per cent of low-income families lack affordable access to the Internet, putting kids at risk of falling behind in school.
     
     
    “At TELUS, we believe that the challenges faced by vulnerable Canadian youth are unacceptable, which is why we are increasing our support of this important group,” said Darren Entwistle, President and CEO of TELUS. 
     
     
    “The TELUS Friendly Future Foundation enables even the smallest grassroots charities that are on the front lines in our communities - yet are often overlooked by large corporate donors - to receive funding grants that will be used to help young Canadians build digital literacy skills, provide basic healthcare and mental health support to the homeless, and open up essential educational opportunities.”
     
     
    Mr. Entwistle added, “In the last two decades, TELUS, our team members and retirees have contributed more than $1 billion through $530 million in financial support and 1.21 million days of volunteerism, giving with our hearts and our hands to Canadians, yet still, there is so much more to be done. Working with the TELUS Community Boards, the Foundation will help to remove barriers and connect our most vulnerable citizens to the resources they need. The potential of these young people is boundless, and it is our responsibility to support and nurture them.”
     
     
    TELUS has a legacy of helping disadvantaged Canadians, earning a global reputation as a values-driven company and the honour of being the first Canadian organization named the most philanthropic company in the world by the Association of Fundraising Professionals.
     
     
    The Friendly Future Foundation builds on the many achievements of the TELUS Community Boards to date and ensures TELUS’ commitment to giving will be sustained for decades to come, solidifying TELUS’ position as the most giving company in the world. The TELUS Community Boards operate in 18 communities where TELUS team members live and work, both in Canada and abroad through TELUS International. Since 2005, the Community Boards have given $72 million to grassroots registered charities in support of 7,000 programs. The TELUS Community Boards operate in Victoria, Vancouver, Thompson Okanagan, Calgary, Edmonton, Manitoba, Ottawa, the Greater Toronto Area, Barrie, Montreal, Quebec City, Rimouski, Atlantic Canada, the Philippines, Bulgaria, Romania, El Salvador, and Guatemala.
     
     
    The support provided by the TELUS Friendly Future Foundation complements TELUS’ existing social-purpose initiatives, including:
     
     
    ●   Internet for Good, a ground-breaking program that offers nearly 30,000 low-income families in B.C. and Alberta access to low-cost, high-speed Internet and a computer. TELUS is expanding this program to even more families through the Government of Canada’s “Connecting Families” initiative this November;
     
     
    ●   Mobility for Good, which offers a free cell phone and data plan to youth aging out of the foster care system in B.C., Ontario, and Quebec, ensuring this vulnerable population can stay connected to their support networks, social services, education and employment opportunities. TELUS will expand this program to Alberta this November, and Manitoba in February 2019;
     
     
    ●   Health for Good, an innovative national program that provides healthcare to vulnerable and underserved Canadians through the deployment of specially equipped mobile health clinics into communities where frontline care is urgently needed.
    For more information about the foundation, to make a donation, or to apply for a grant, please visit friendlyfuture.com.
     
     
    About TELUS’ social purpose:
     
    In support of our philosophy to give where we live, TELUS, our team members and retirees have contributed over $530 million to charitable and not-for-profit organizations and volunteered more than 8.7 million hours of service to local communities since 2000. 
     
     
    Created in 2005 by President and CEO Darren Entwistle, TELUS’ 13 Canadian Community Boards and five international boards have led the Company’s support of grassroots charities and have contributed $72 million in support of 7,000 local charitable projects, enriching the lives of more than 2 million children and youth, annually. TELUS was honoured to be named the most outstanding philanthropic corporation globally for 2010 by the Association of Fundraising Professionals, becoming the first Canadian company to receive this prestigious international recognition. For more information about TELUS, please visit telus.com.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Homicide Detectives Identify Woman Found Dead In Richmond As 19-Year-Old Aspen Pallot

    Homicide investigators on the Lower Mainland responded to their third case in less than 24 hours Thursday as they were called to a fatal shooting in B.C.'s Fraser Valley.

    Homicide Detectives Identify Woman Found Dead In Richmond As 19-Year-Old Aspen Pallot

    Body Of 19-Year-Old Woman Found In Richmond, B.C., Home, Man In Custody

    British Columbia's Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says the body of a 19-year-old woman was found early Thursday in a home in Richmond, B.C.

    Body Of 19-Year-Old Woman Found In Richmond, B.C., Home, Man In Custody

    28-Yr-Old Man Accused Of Exposing Himself To More Than 60 Girls, Young Women Across Vancouver

    28-Yr-Old Man Accused Of Exposing Himself To More Than 60 Girls, Young Women Across Vancouver
      Kurjata is accused of committing an indecent act in public, exposing genitals to a minor. This map of indecent acts shows that allegedly took place in Vancouver between July 6 and 18, 2018 

    28-Yr-Old Man Accused Of Exposing Himself To More Than 60 Girls, Young Women Across Vancouver

    'Insensitive And Disrespectful:' Mass Killer Matthew de Grood's Review Angers Victim's Father

    'Insensitive And Disrespectful:' Mass Killer Matthew de Grood's Review Angers Victim's Father
    CALGARY — The father of one of five young people stabbed to death at a Calgary house party in 2014 says the mental health board overseeing the killer's treatment has been insensitive and disrespectful to the victims' families.

    'Insensitive And Disrespectful:' Mass Killer Matthew de Grood's Review Angers Victim's Father

    Future Uncertain For Long-Standing Vancouver Pot Shops After Legalization

    Future Uncertain For Long-Standing Vancouver Pot Shops After Legalization
    VANCOUVER — Cannabis connoisseurs in Vancouver have been able to buy potent weed over the counter for years — but ironically, that could change when marijuana becomes legal.

    Future Uncertain For Long-Standing Vancouver Pot Shops After Legalization

    B.C. Wine Industry Disappointed Over Coming Grocery Store Sales Changes

    B.C. Wine Industry Disappointed Over Coming Grocery Store Sales Changes
    VANCOUVER — Dirty Laundry winery in Summerland, B.C., estimates it will sell fewer bottles of red and white in grocery stores as shelf space previously reserved for local companies will soon be shared with U.S. imports.

    B.C. Wine Industry Disappointed Over Coming Grocery Store Sales Changes