28
May
Assistance League of San Jose Awards George G. and Jeanette A. Stuart Charitable Trust
George G. and Jeanette A. Stuart Charitable Trust provides continuous generous funding of Assistance League of San Jose’s Operation School Bell program. Over the past six years, their funding enabled the chapter to add ten more schools, resulting in 2600 more uniforms being distributed.
27
May
Assistance League of Everett honors Fred Meyer for Their Ongoing Support
Fred Meyer stores in four counties and their staffs received a National Operation School Bell Award for working with Assistance League of Everett since 2006 to best clothe students in need through the chapter’s Teen Retail program.
16
May
Assistance League of Indianapolis Awards MCR Charitable Foundation
MCR Charitable Foundation generously covers the yearly cost of large duffle bags used by Assistance League of Indianapolis’ Operation School Bell program. Each bag contains new clothing, school supplies, hygiene kits and two age appropriate books. Many recipients are transient and the bags serve as a closet or dresser.
14
May
Assistance League of Atlanta honors Access Apparel with a National Operation School Bell Award
Assistance League of Atlanta honored Billy Yu and his team at Access Apparel with a National Operation School Bell Award. For over six years Access Apparel has provided of a variety of services that help increase the number of children their Operation School Bell program serves.
12
May
Assistance League of Omaha Honors Carl Brady
Carl Brady received a National Operation School Bell Award from Assistance League of Omaha for his thousands of hours of technical expertise helping the chapter successfully process requests and clothe children in need from nearly 200 schools throughout Omaha’s metropolitan area.
11
May
Assistance League of Greater San Diego honored San Diego Unified School District’s Office of Children and Youth in Transition with a National Operation School Bell Award for their ongoing work, enabling the chapter to clothe more than 200 of the hardest to reach children in San Diego.
