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Wed July 13, 2022 - National Edition
In honor of its 50th anniversary in the United States, Kubota Tractor Corporation named five winners in its annual Kubota Hometown Proud Grant Program.
Each winner will receive $100,000 to help revitalize a community project and one hometown project will win an additional $100,000 grant as the Community Choice Award winner.
Every vote cast at KubotaHometownProud.com is entered into a separate sweepstakes for a chance to win a Kubota sub-compact tractor or zero turn mower.
As the childhood poverty capital of California, building nutritional security for children in the Salinas Valley is essential, and expanding the Monterey Food Bank campus is an important next step toward that goal.
"Five-Acre Farm and Kids Food Fix" puts children at the center of a hands-on learning experience and uses healthy food to engage all aspects of the child's education.
The Food Bank of Monterey County currently serves 160,000 individuals each month, more than half of them are children. The Kubota Hometown Proud grant will be used to help build out a large barn, which will serve as the hub, offering a test kitchen, production space and community gathering space to serve school children and their families.
If awarded the additional Community Choice Award grant, the organization also will be able to set up irrigation on the five acres, prep the land and plant their first crops onsite.
On May 15, 2013, an EF4 tornado destroyed much of the community of Rancho Brazos, a subdivision in Granbury, Texas, a rural community located in Hood County 30 mi. southwest of Fort Worth, Texas. Despite this devastating event, the spirit of the people in this community continues to shine.
To enhance and continue its services, the Douglas Long Outreach Center is getting support from Kubota to develop a new distribution center on the 4.66 acres of land leased from Hood County for the sum of $1 per year for 99 years. Kubota will help the organization to fund the development and maintenance of a community garden, livestock area and various agricultural projects for the local community and will break ground this summer.
If awarded the additional Community Choice Award grant, the organization will be able to enhance its rainwater collection system as well as expand its physical footprint to allow the space to teach local children about gardening, compost, livestock care and sustainable irrigation.
Teresa De Young, a mom raising her family in New Richmond, Wis., realized that there were no local playgrounds in her area that were accessible to her son, Will, who has Down Syndrome. She became more involved in her community to make play accessible to all children growing up in their hometown of New Richmond, Wis.
Kubota is proud to partner with the New Richmond Area Community Foundation on Will's Playground and is awarding one of the 2022 Kubota Hometown Proud grants to the cause. The $100,000 grant will support demo of an out-of-date play structure and construction of a new, large-scale, all-access universal design playground including areas for sensory play, landscaping, fencing and accessible restrooms.
If awarded the additional Community Choice Award grant, the organization will be able to improve the surrounding fence and add more playground equipment including adaptive swings and sensory equipment with auditory and tactile elements.
Homesteads for Hope is a 55-acre community farm located along the Historic Erie Canal in Rochester, N.Y.
While many nonprofits in the special needs community did not survive the pandemic, Homesteads grew over the last few years, and was able to take in some of the people who had nowhere else to go.
The farm currently serves more than 600 families and hosts over 3,000 visitors each year. This intentional community breaks down barriers with programs that use "nature's classroom" to teach adults with disabilities important life skills and how to work real jobs.
Kubota is proud to award one of its 2022 Kubota Hometown Proud grants to Homesteads for Hope, where the $100,000 will be used to: (1) Expand their Social Garden Program for those with more challenging needs and mobility-based disabilities, (2) Double their 80-plot community garden and the program's impact, and (3) Renovate the estate home with new doors and windows to weatherproof the main program spaces for year-round use.
If awarded the additional Community Choice Grant, the organization also will be able to: (1) Finish the renovation on their 18th century historic barns to include new siding and electrical upgrades and (2) Pour new concrete pathways to increase accessibility. These projects would allow Homesteads to triple the amount of people they serve and give them the momentum needed to start their eagerly anticipated inclusive housing village, which will give 250 to 300 people of all abilities a place to call home.
Langton Green applied for the Kubota Hometown Proud grant program seeking funding to provide garden plots for older people and people with developmental and intellectual disabilities.
The project was born out of a community need to reach older adults combatting loneliness, particularly among seniors who have relocated to community residential facilities. In the process, Langton Green hopes that more members of the community will join in gardening, volunteering and participating in farm events, resulting in more friendships with visitors for Langton Green residents.
Langton Green offers job coaching, vocational training, and access to meaningful paid and volunteer positions at the Langton Green Community Farm. The Kubota Hometown Proud grant of $100,000 will be used to add raised garden beds to help provide vegetables, fruit and eggs to more than the existing 100 community residents it already feeds, equipment to help maintain the program and renovation costs for its facilities.
If awarded the additional Community Choice Award grant, the organization will be able to build on the newly developed Community Garden space to establish a ½ acre handicapped accessible garden with paths, invest in solar power for a recently completed Performance and Arts Garden, and purchase a replacement mower to maintain the 13-acre property and augment the landscaping operation that employs adults with disabilities.
In the spirit of "Together We Do More," Kubota is calling for the public's help in selecting a winner for its Community Choice Award grant, which would essentially double the award money for one of the five community projects. From now until July 25 at 11:59 p.m. CT, the public is invited to visit KubotaHometownProud.com to cast a vote for one of the top five community projects. Every vote cast will be automatically entered into a sweepstakes for a chance to win a Kubota residential Z200 Series zero-turn mower or BX Series sub-compact tractor. Voters can enter one vote per day for more chances to win. The community project with the most votes will be announced as the Community Choice Award winner in August 2022.
Kubota announced its second annual community revitalization grant program, "Kubota Hometown Proud," this past April, calling on cities, towns, municipalities and nonprofits to submit an application for consideration. Nearly 900 entries were received and reviewed from across the country, demonstrating diverse and heartfelt needs from communities big and small. Last year, Kubota awarded one grant in the inaugural year of the program; this year, in honor of the company's 50th Anniversary, Kubota awarded five grants of $100,000 each as well as a Community Choice Award grant, which will award an additional $100,000 to one of the lucky winners.
For more information and for Kubota Hometown Proud Grant Program official rules, visit KubotaHometownProud.com.