作者 NetsFan (隨時做好準備) 看板 Nets
標題 VC與母親捐贈160萬美金(約台幣5280萬)
時間 Thu Aug 23 01:09:33 2007
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VC和他的媽媽 捐了160萬給虐待治療中心,以增加100個床位
這個治療中心將於明年設於Bunnell。
過去VC也捐了2百50萬給他的母校高中。
紐澤西好人隊果然不是說假的...
http://tinyurl.com/232tba
DAYTONA BEACH – Standing side by side, NBA star Vince Carter and his mom
spoke passionately about donating more than a million dollars to the
community for something that has affected their family and friends.
Carter, 30, and his mother, Michelle Carter-Scott, gave $1.6 million Tuesday
to a new 100-bed substance abuse treatment facility planned to open next year
in Bunnell.
Because of the donation to the Steward-Marchman Center and its foundation,
the facility, which starts construction in the fall, will be called The Vince
Carter Sanctuary and a multipurpose building will be named after Carter’s
mother.
The donation brings the agency about 70 percent closer to its $8 million goal
for the project, which will include two 50-bed, two-story dormitories and a
research center in partnership with the University of Florida.
Both Carter, a Mainland High School graduate who plays for the New Jersey
Nets, and his mom, who lives in Daytona Beach, said they’ve seen not only in
their own family, but with friends, celebrities and athletes how substance
abuse “negatively affects their lives and the people around them.”
“If there’s something we can do to help them get their lives back on track,
that would be wonderful,” Carter-Scott said.
Vince Carter’s brother, Christopher Allen Carter, 27, has struggled with
arrests for possession of marijuana and cocaine and most recently with the
intent to distribute, court records show.
While not specifically addressing his brother, Carter said at a press
conference that substance abuse is “something near and dear to me.”
“We all have family that go through tough times,” he said.
Through his travels, he said he’s not seen a street anywhere that didn’t
have addicts on the corner. If he can help just one person, he said, who
will then go and tell another person, it will become a “chain reaction.”
His mother said substance abuse is something that impacts everyone regardless
of income or education level.
“I’ve seen a lot of skilled and educated young people throw it all away,”
she said.
She’s hoping the research part of the center can help find the answer to why
people who are successful and have a bright future continue to go back to
drugs.
“I hope we can find (the answer) in this lifetime,” Carter-Scott said.
Ernest Cantley, president of the Stewart-Marchman Center, said the agency is
grateful to the Carters, whom he called “two special people. We’re
extremely proud of what he’s accomplished and that he’s still a part of the
Daytona Beach community,” Cantley said.
Carter, who lives in Orlando, said it’s important to give back to
Volusia-Flagler because “this is where I started.” Carter and his mom gave
$2.5 million toward Mainland High School’s athletic center that bears his
name. His foundation, the Embassy of Hope, of which his mom is the executive
director, also helps area agencies.
The two spoke after the news conference about advice for people struggling
with substance abuse.
Carter said a person has to be ready to say “enough is enough.”
“Self-motivate yourself,” he added. “Nobody can help you unless you help
yourself first.”