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THE UPS FOUNDATION THE LOGISTICS OF 2014 SOCIAL IMPACT REPORT

Social Impact Report 2014

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THE UPS FOUNDATION

THE LOGISTICS OF

2014 SOCIAL IMPACT REPORT

1

Message from Eduardo MartinezPresident, The UPS Foundation

The Logistics of Caring leads to lasting social impact — one story at a time. Whether working to enhance access to higher education, protect our environment by offsetting carbon emissions, improve road safety, or enhance our long relationship with United Way, The UPS Foundation is building more resilient communities around the world. We recognize, however, that much more work remains to be done, and there are more stories to be told — stories such as the ones you’ll find within these pages.

For more than 60 years, we’ve been a leader in corporate social responsibility and in recent decades have focused our efforts on championing global citizenship. We’re proud of the work we do in collaboration with dedicated community-based organizations around the world and of the tireless

efforts of tens of thousands of UPSers who give their best as volunteers every year.

Since 2011, UPS volunteers have logged 5.3 million service hours around the world, and in 2014, we announced our pledge of completing 20 million hours of global volun-teerism and community service by the end of 2020. We firmly believe we can make the greatest impact by supplementing our philanthropy with the vast knowledge and skill of UPSers and the powerful spirit of our volunteers, who contributed nearly 1.9 million volunteer hours this year.

In 2014, UPS’s philanthropic efforts totaled $104 million and touched lives on six continents by focusing our approach in the areas of diversity and inclusion, community safety, the environment and volunteerism. UPSers

and UPS retirees extended our philanthropic impact by contributing nearly $52 million to United Way.

But the real story is on these pages, for these are the faces and the lives we’ve touched. Every dollar invested and every hour volunteered is about them. Building a better world won’t happen on its own, and we’re pleased that through the Logistics of Caring we’re able to do our part.

Sincerely,

Table of Contents

Volunteerism 34OUR PLEDGE 36

• UPS Global Employee Volunteerism 37

• Stepping Up to Help Local Veterans 38

• Volunteers in Thailand Head Back to School 39

Diversity & Inclusion 4ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT 6 • Accion

MENTORSHIP 8 • 100 Black Men of America

EDUCATION 10 • National Federation of the Blind

INCLUSION 12 • Human Rights Campaign

Community Safety 20DISASTER PREPAREDNESS 24 • American Red Cross

EMERGENCY RESPONSE 26 • Responding to the Ebola Outbreak

POST-CRISIS RECOVERY 28 • Helping the Philippines Rebuild

UPS ROAD CODE® 30 • Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Washington

GLOBAL ROAD SAFETY 32 • Fleet Forum

Environmental 14 SustainabilityUPS GLOBAL FORESTRY INITIATIVE 16 • Earth Day Network

REFORESTATION 18 • World Wildlife Fund

Local Community Grants 40OLMSTEAD PARKS CONSERVANCY 42 • Supporting Volunteer Leaders in Louisville

MAGIC BUS FOUNDATION 44 • Creating Change in Bhiwandi

Scholarships 46INTERNATIONAL JAMES E. CASEY 47 SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM • 2014 James E. Casey Scholarship Winner: 48

Ravideep Boparai, Canada

• 2014 James E. Casey Scholarship Winner: 49 Kanchana Loysawai, Thailand

United Way 50HELPING FAMILIES ACHIEVE FINANCIAL STABILITY 51

2014 FOUNDATION FUNDING RECIPIENTS 52

2014 TRUSTEES & STAFF 60

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Over $8 million invested in

organizations that embody community

safety

Diversity & Inclusion Volunteerism

Community Safety

Over $13 million

invested in organizations that embody

diversity

In 2014, UPS pledged

20 million hours of volunteer

service by 2020

More than 1.7 million

trees planted in 2014

Environmental Sustainability

$104.2 million

total philanthropic

contributions

2 0

4,260 organizations

supported through

UPS funding

1 4

54

Diversity & InclusionCreating opportunities for under-represented communities

The UPS Foundation funds initiatives focused on enhancing opportunities for higher education, economic empowerment, mentorship and inclusion for underserved or under-represented segments of society.

25,850 microloans supporting female

entrepreneurs around the world

Over $13 million invested in

organizations that embody

diversity

Over 26,000 underserved youth received increased

access to educational opportunities

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Economic EmpowermentSince 2007, The UPS Foundation has helped Accion International build a financially inclusive world by giving people the tools they need to improve their lives. Accion connects small business owners with the financing and advice it takes to create or grow healthy enterprises. A world pioneer in microfinance, Accion has helped build 63 microfinance institutions in 32 countries on four continents. Grants from UPS are assisting Accion’s partner in Mexico, CrediConfia, with expanding access to microfinance for hard-working entrepreneurs and low-income households in rural and semi-urban areas in East-Central Mexico.

Alejandra Álvarez proudly gazes across her newly built workshop, where she works as a clay potter in Puebla, Mexico. She has room to store raw materials and her finished products — all protected from rain and the hot Mexican sun. But this was not always the case.

A few years ago, she molded clay under the blazing sun in an open-air workshop where she also faced the frequent rainstorms that are typical in this part of central Mexico. Without a roof, the rains meant lost productivity, damaged materials and the destruction of her clay pots. These conditions led to a loss of income for Alejandra. She knew that she needed to take action and apply for a loan to upgrade the facility, but bank after bank denied her credit.

Then she met a loan officer from Accion partner CrediConfía, an institution that finally trusted her with a small loan. Alejandra no longer toils in precarious conditions, always at the mercy of Mother Nature. Now on her third loan from CrediConfía, with a roof over her head and a safe and secure place for her business,

Alejandra is able to dream about the future. “When the work is dignified,” she says with a smile, “it doesn’t matter if it’s dirty.” Alejandra’s story is an example of the indelible and life-changing impact microcredit loans can have on individuals, their families and the community.

Since 2008, funding from The UPS Foundation has allowed Accion to provide support to microfinance institutions around the world that are reaching millions of clients just like Alejandra. In 2014, The UPS Foundation’s funding arrived at a critical point in CrediConfia’s growth and the grant enabled Accion to help the institution build its capacity, delivering much-needed financial products and services to underserved regions of Mexico. With The UPS Foundation’s support, CrediConfia is able to reach hundreds of new clients each month — clients with the same determination as Alejandra. In 2014, UPS support enabled Accion to provide 6,750 loans in Mexico and 1,100 loans in the United States.

Accion

Since 1961, Accion has helped build 63 microfinance institutions in 32 countries on four continents. In 2014, UPS support enabled Accion to provide 6,750 loans in Mexico and 1,100 loans in the United States.

Diversity & Inclusion

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MentorshipThrough its unique programming, the 100 Black Men of America (the 100) provides an environment where young people are encouraged and motivated to achieve as they mature into practical, self-sufficient and responsible stake-holders in the economic and social dynamics of their communities. The mission of the 100 is to improve the quality of life within their communities and enhance educational and economic opportunities for all African Americans. One of the organization’s signature programs is Mentoring the 100 Way®, where trained and certified 100 members become mentors, advocates and role models for the youth within their communities. The UPS Foundation has supported the 100 since 1997, helping the organization in its quest to bolster on-time graduation rates and strengthen the moral character and work ethic of the youth in its program.

Through its Mentoring the 100 Way®, the 100 Black Men of America (the 100) has a sound strategy for addressing the social, emotional and cultural needs of children ages 8 to 18. The 100’s members are trained and certified to become mentors, advocates and role models for the youth within their communities. The program focuses on building essential skills needed to become productive and contributing citizens, and the program yields a 96 percent high school graduation rate.

Jalen N. Lewis is a prime example of the positive impact the 100 is making in communities across the United States. Jalen has been a mentee in the 100 Black Men of Baton Rouge chapter since the sixth grade. He’s forged a life-long relationship with his mentors to develop self-discipline, self-love, educational excellence and personal responsibility. A senior at Glen Oaks High School in Baton Rouge, Jalen juggles academics, extracurricular activities and community service, which include visiting nursing homes, feeding the homeless and tutoring youth in his community.

In June 2014, Jalen received the highest honor for a mentee, the 100 Black Men of America Mentee of the Year Award. “Jalen is goal orientated, self-motivated and cooperative, and the mentees in the program look up to him as a leader,” said Michael Victorian, president of the Baton Rouge chapter. With a 3.5 GPA, Jalen serves as a battalion commander, lead cadet of ROTC, president of the LA Gear Up Explorers’ Club and section leader in the school band. Upon high school graduation, he plans to attend college before enlisting in the United States Armed Forces to fulfill his dreams of becoming an officer.

As a long-time investor in the 100’s mission and programs, The UPS Foundation and UPS volunteers continue to assist the organization in making verifiable differences in the lives of disenfranchised and disconnected youth. By valuing the 100’s core service, delivering mentoring, and upholding the 100’s motto — “What they see is what they’ll be” — UPS volunteers are acting as role models for high school and collegiate youth. Over the years, the 100 has deepened and sustained its impact in the communities it serves and increased its organizational effectiveness and efficiencies as a direct result of the in-kind and financial investments from UPS.

100 Black Men of America

Jalen N. Lewis accepts the 100 Black Men of America Mentee of the Year Award from Curley Dossman Jr., Chairman of the Board.

Diversity & Inclusion

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EducationSince 1940, the National Federation of the Blind (NFB) has worked to ensure that blindness is not the characteristic that defines blind people or their ability to create their own future. Braille education and outreach is an essential part of NFB’s approach to addressing the illiteracy crisis among the blind. Enhanced literacy rates will enable more blind adults to enter the workforce with the skills they need to succeed. The UPS Foundation has supported the NFB since 1992, and in 2014, it provided grant support for Braille literacy programming, services and outreach for blind children and adults. UPSers are also prominent at NFB’s annual convention. In 2014, more than 225 employees, family and friends volunteered to assist NFB members as they navigated their way to the various events.

Lindsay Adair is a Braille reader. Her mom, Laura, is a firm believer that the National Federation of the Blind (NFB) and its programs are vital to her daughter’s success. “Lindsay is a blind child, and she will grow up to be a blind adult,” she said. “I want to be part of a group that can prepare her for that. She needs blind role models, specialized programs and mentoring programs. She needs the NFB.”

One of the NFB’s objectives is overcoming the literacy crisis among the blind in the United States. The organization is working with The UPS Foundation to transform the way in which Braille education is approached. While these efforts include many Braille-related services, technology and outreach, some of the most important work involves the youngest Braille readers — even those not yet reading. Just like sighted children, the earlier that blind children are exposed to Braille reading, the better positioned they are for success later in life.

“Literacy is not a luxury; it is a right and a responsibility,” said President Clinton in 1994. Yet, 20 years later, less than 10 percent of blind children are learning Braille in school, and there is a 70 percent unemployment rate among blind adults. Too many are told that their way of reading is outdated, that reading is too difficult for them, and that listening is just as good as reading. The NFB wants the blind to know that they can live the lives they want. Blindness is not what holds them back.

Through the NFB’s Braille Reading Pals Club, an early literacy program, parents and young blind children are encouraged to read together. Participants are given books with print and Braille so that the parent can read while the blind child follows along with the “bumps” on the page.

National Federation of the Blind

“Lindsay is a blind child who will grow up to be a blind adult, and I want to be part of a group that can prepare her for that,” said Laura Bostick, Lindsay’s mother. “She needs blind role models and programs like Braille Readers Are Leaders, Youth Slam, Slate Pals, Buddy Camps and mentoring programs. She needs the NFB.”

With The UPS Foundation’s support, the NFB continues to help raise expectations, remove barriers and increase the number of blind children receiving exposure to Braille literacy instruction. This will transform the way in which Braille and blindness are understood.

Diversity & Inclusion

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InclusionAs America’s largest civil rights organization working to achieve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) equality, the Human Rights Campaign seeks to inspire and engage all Americans in ending discrimination against LGBT citizens and realize a nation that achieves fundamental fairness and equality for all. The UPS Foundation provides support for the HRC Foundation’s Workplace Project, which is a nationally recognized source of expert information and advice on LGBT workplace issues. With UPS’s support, in 2014, the HRC expanded its education programming related to the Workplace Project’s most visible and effective program — the Corporate Equality Index (CEI), a benchmarking tool for U.S. businesses in the evolving field of LGBT workplace equality.

The pursuit of equal rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Americans celebrated a historic year of progress in 2014. According to the Human Rights Campaign, corporate America stood out as a true leader in the fight for basic fairness and dignity.

The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) Foundation’s Corporate Equality Index (CEI) measures that commitment. The CEI is the most visible and effective program of HRC’s Workplace Project. This national benchmarking tool of corporate policies and practices related to LGBT workplace equality spans nearly every industry and geography.

“Corporate America has long recognized the imperative of LGBT inclusion by implementing their own LGBT-friendly policies ahead of lawmakers,” said Deena Fidas, director of the Workplace Equality Program. “We are at the front of a new era in which major businesses are not only meeting ever-higher new bars for workplace fairness, but are exceeding them by becoming social and public policy change agents in the process. They recognize equality is not just the right thing to do, but it is sound business practice.”

The CEI has transformed LGBT equality in corporate America over the past 13 years, as a majority of Fortune 500 companies now protect their employees on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. Support from The UPS Foundation enabled the HRC to expand its Workplace Project education efforts in 2014 by providing funding for additional webinars, as well as the national and regional Corporate Equality Series.

Human Rights Campaign

Thanks in part to The UPS Foundation’s engagement, the CEI does not just live on paper. Funding support enables HRC staff to engage business communities in the United States and around the world on issues that they continue to face towards full LGBT inclusion.

Diversity & Inclusion

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Environmental SustainabilitySupporting energy conservation and reforestation

The UPS Foundation provides financial and employee volunteer support to environmental programs focused on reforestation and conservation, carbon reduction efforts, and environmental research and education.

$3.7 million invested

in organizations that embody

environmental sustainability

Through its Global Forestry Initiative, UPS has planted

more than 3 million trees since 2012

35,000 trees planted as part of

UPS Employee Forest

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UPS Global Forestry Initiative Launched in 2011, The UPS Global Forestry Initiative enables its global partners to plant, protect and preserve trees in urban and rural areas around the world. As part of this initiative, UPS started its Two Million Tree Campaign with the goal of planting two million trees over two years. By supporting organizations such as The Nature Conservancy, Earth Day Network, Arbor Day Foundation and the National Park Foundation, UPS has surpassed this goal by planting three million trees since 2012. In 2014, The UPS Foundation support enabled the planting of more than 1.7 million trees around the world. One of the Foundation’s partners is Earth Day Network (EDN), which works with more than 22,000 partners in 192 countries to broaden, diversify and mobilize the environmental movement. The UPS Foundation supports EDN’s Trees for Communities Project, which will plant a total of 400,000 trees in the Boreal Forests of Russia, Norway and Canada and in the African countries of Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanzania.

Paskwale Karambu lives and works on a small farm near the tea plantations and lush vegetation of Mount Kenya National Park. To help support his eight children, Paskwale supplements his farming income through beekeeping.

Paskwale is able to maintain his beehives in Mount Kenya’s protected forest and harvest kilos of honey each year thanks to a partnership between his farmer group and the Kenya National Park Service. The park service allows local farmers to keep honeybees and collect fuel wood and feed for livestock in Mount Kenya National Park in return for work the farmers perform in planting trees on degraded hillsides.

Mount Kenya, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is just one of many areas of the world where The UPS Foundation’s support for Earth Day Network’s Trees for Communities program helps protect the world’s most vulnerable communities. In addition to promoting biodiversity, securing land from erosion and capturing atmospheric carbon, these programs also benefit individuals by providing food, energy and education on forestry practices that strengthen communities.

In addition to the ongoing work in Africa, UPS support also focuses on protecting the Boreal Forest in Russia, Norway and Canada — all of which is considered the largest terrestrial ecosystem in the world. Its trees and peat lands comprise one of the world’s largest carbon reservoirs and its wetlands filter millions of gallons of water each day.

Since 2011, Trees for Communities has planted more than 778,600 trees in eight countries around the world.

In total, the amount of carbon captured by UPS’s support of the Trees for Communities project is estimated at 18,801 tons per year.*

Earth Day Network

* Carbon-offset is estimated at 48 pounds of CO2 sequestered per tree per year, which is a standard measurement for trees planted in temperate climates.

With support from UPS under Earth Day Network’s Trees for Communities program, farm groups such as Paskwale’s Njuri Environmental Group transplant indigenous tree seedlings including native Markhamia and Podocarpus trees.

Environmental Sustainability

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ReforestationThe World Wildlife Fund (WWF) wants to build a future where people and nature live together in harmony. WWF’s mission is to conserve nature and reduce the most pressing threats to the diversity of life on Earth. Created in 1961, WWF seeks to inspire people to advance the cause of conservation. The UPS Foundation began supporting WWF in 2005. In 2014, funding from UPS was directed to WWF’s Reforestation Grant Program to help restore the vast mangrove forest along the coast of Honduras and to help fisheries and other wildlife habitats.

In 1998, Hurricane Mitch — the second-deadliest hurri-cane to hit the Western Hemisphere — made landfall on the Bay Islands of Honduras. The storm left more than 14,600 dead and devastated Honduran communities from the mountains to the sea. The Bay Islands were among the hardest-hit parts of the country, especially Guanaja Island, which was slammed by 40-foot waves and 120-mile-per-hour winds that destroyed 98 percent of Guanaja’s mangroves. The mangroves are an important resource for the island’s 10,000 inhabitants whose main source of income comes from fishing and shrimping.

Mangrove forests act as nurseries for commercial fish and provide a habitat for crab, shrimp, mollusk species and other wildlife. The mangrove’s dense root systems help reduce the impact of surges from hurricanes and other storms. The roots also stabilize beaches where marine turtles nest.

Mangroves can usually self-regenerate, but Hurricane Mitch completely destroyed Guanaja’s mangroves. Twenty years later, the Guanaja mangroves still haven’t come back. Local organizations have taken matters into their own hands and started replanting the mangroves by hand. The Bay Islands Conservation Association (BICA) is leading this effort with assistance from World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

In July 2014, with support from The UPS Foundation, WWF awarded BICA a reforestation grant. The grant helped the local organization plant 59,000 red mangrove saplings and trained 80 community members in reforestation and mangrove restoration techniques. The project has proven to be a huge success with more than 90 percent of the mangrove saplings surviving. BICA plans to replicate this hugely successful project across the island.

WWF focuses its reforestation grants on areas that have been scientifically prioritized as globally important and where reforestation efforts would be most successful. In Honduras, WWF helped BICA because mangrove restoration will help conserve the Mesoamerican Reef, the second-largest barrier reef in the world.

Support from The UPS Foundation enables WWF’s Reforestation Grant Program to support locally based organizations throughout Africa, Asia and Latin America that have a proven record of successful restoration projects. Relying mainly on native tree species, these projects have restored more than 741 acres of degraded tropical forests and wetlands and planted over 400,000 trees.

World Wildlife Fund

With UPS’s support, the WWF’s Reforestation Grant Program has restored more than 741 acres of degraded tropical forests and wetlands and planted over 400,000 trees.

Environmental Sustainability

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Community SafetyEnhancing community well-being through humanitarian relief and resilience and road safety

UPS aims to make the world a safer place by using our logistics expertise and training to teach safety practices in the local and global communities we serve. The UPS Foundation supports these efforts by creating and funding programs focused on road safety and humanitarian relief and resilience.

$8 million invested in organizations

that embody community safety

263 humanitarian shipments across

43 countries

6,310 UPS Road Code® Graduates

in 2014 from 83 sites worldwide

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Humanitarian disasters, regardless of whether they originate from natural phenomena or global conflict, are occurring on an unprecedented scale. Meeting the needs of these crises requires innovation and commitment between business, government and non-governmental organizations. Through the UPS Humanitarian Relief & Resilience Program, The UPS Foundation provides capacity-building support, emergency funding, and in-kind contributions to help develop strategic partnerships with global and local organizations and to strengthen disaster preparedness, response and recovery efforts. UPS’s goal is that its Humanitarian Relief & Resilience Program will help communities become more resilient and recover more quickly and efficiently when the next disaster strikes. In 2014, The UPS Foundation’s Humanitarian Relief & Resilience Program provided $8 million in relief aid to its strategic partners and coordinated 263 relief shipments across 43 countries.

Humanitarian Relief & Resilience Program

Road safety is a major global issue. Around the world, road traffic incidents are one of the top 10 causes of death. With UPS’s deeply embedded safety culture and the energy of its employee volunteers, the company is making an indelible impact on road safety around the world. It’s a powerful example of how business can leverage what it does best to address some of society’s most troubling issues.

UPS Road Code®, a program designed for young or inexperienced drivers, is at the center of UPS’s road safety strategy. The state-of-the-art interactive program uses classroom instruction and virtual driving simulators to teach the safety “code” or habits used by UPS drivers, who also serve as volunteer instructors. The UPS Foundation also engages with organizations around the globe to promote safe-driving best practices and to educate children and their families on the importance of road safety.

Global Road Safety

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For more than 30 years, UPS and the American Red Cross (ARC) have come together to assist communities in preparing, recovering and rebuilding from disasters. UPS shares its vast logistics, supply chain, fleet manage-ment and operations experience to help ARC better meet its mission of serving disaster survivors 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.

One outcome of this relationship is the supply chain optimization project that was initiated by the Red Cross following Hurricane Sandy. The UPS team was given access to ARC’s disaster services processes, routes and procedures and was able to identify recommendations to optimize warehousing and resource allocation for potential savings of more than $1 million a year.

The biggest impact resulted from the recommendation to move ARC’s primary warehouse from Hattiesburg, MS, to Dallas, TX. The new Disaster Field Supply Center is a 174,000 square foot warehouse that can house enough relief supplies and meals and provide safe shelter for up to 100,000 people. It allows ARC to serve a larger population of Americans within 24 hours. The local Dallas Chapter of the Red Cross was able to move into the space as well, saving an additional $750,000 annually over the 10 years of the building’s lease.

Once the planning was completed, UPS transported tractor-trailer loads valued at $70,000 in-kind to Dallas to help offset the relocation costs. UPS also provided in-kind transportation to pre-position trailers containing relief supplies in disaster-prone areas prior to hurricane season, which enables the Red Cross to deploy supplies to shelters quickly if needed.

American Red Cross

“We couldn’t be happier to have this new national warehouse in the center of the Metroplex,” said T.D. Smyers, Chief Executive Officer, American Red Cross North Texas Region. “From this strategic location, Red Cross teams will be able to quickly move supplies whenever and wherever they’re needed across America.”

Photo credit: Scott A. Godbey

Cash grants from The UPS Foundation support the Red Cross Annual Disaster Giving Program (ADGP). The ADGP enables the Red Cross to respond to any domestic disaster immediately. UPS has also built the Logistical Action Team (LAT), which is a specially-trained group of logisticians that can deploy within 24 hours of a disaster and assist local Red Cross chapters with the speedy transportation of needed relief items.

This dynamic public-private partnership has consistently helped ARC operate more efficiently and enhanced ARC’s capacity to care for those in need.

Humanitarian Relief & Resilience Program

Disaster PreparednessPreventing and alleviating human suffering is the mission of the American Red Cross. As one of the premier humanitarian relief organizations in the United States, the Red Cross has helped people in need since 1881. Through its strong network of volunteers, donors and partners, the American Red Cross helps turn compassion into action. UPS is proud to be among the Red Cross partners who pre-invest in disaster response so the organization is ready to deploy and respond to a disaster at a moment’s notice. Through the volunteer efforts of UPSers across the country and the philanthropic impact of The UPS Foundation, the Red Cross has the infrastructure it needs to serve those affected by disasters.

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Emergency ResponseWith its unparalleled global logistics network and skilled employees, UPS is well equipped to help humanitarian relief organizations deliver emergency aid when disaster strikes. From The UPS Foundation’s financial support to the trained volunteers serving on Logistics Emergency Teams and the unique in-kind transportation solutions, UPS offers the complete package.

When the Ebola outbreak started in the West African country of Guinea, it soon spread to neighboring countries Sierra Leone, Liberia and Nigeria, affecting more than 20,000 individuals. Humanitarian relief organizations were mobilized to provide aid and important medical equipment to the impacted areas. The complexities of this crisis required a wide-scale response, and UPS was ready to help.

Photo credit: Rein Skullerud

An unparalleled outbreak of the Ebola virus swept across West Africa in 2014, creating a public health crisis and leaving misery and uncertainty in its wake. The world’s leading humanitarian organizations were challenged to provide medical personnel, medical facilities, supplies, hygiene kits and food to the affected areas. Joining the global response was The UPS Foundation, which provided $750,000 in emergency funding, logistics support and in-kind shipments of high priority items to relief agencies actively combating the viral outbreak.

Part of that emergency funding was directed to the World Food Programme (WFP) Global Logistics Cluster, which assumed the responsibility for coordinating logistics for the humanitarian community involved in the Ebola response. Using the Logistics Cluster’s well-established Logistics Emergency Team (LET) public-private partnership model, the WFP was able to leverage UPS’s expertise to establish enhanced response capabilities.

As a member of the LET partnership, UPS assisted the Logistics Cluster in establishing an Ebola response air cargo staging area at the Cologne-Bonn Airport in Germany. The staging area enabled the WFP to consolidate shipments and provide storage and staging of supplies, ensuring that vital medical and relief cargo reached those helping to combat the disease on the frontline. In total, 932 metric tons of supplies were moved through the facility in support of 40 different humanitarian agencies.

In addition, The UPS Foundation helped get the highest priority items to West Africa by providing in-kind transportation to other humanitarian relief agencies, including UNICEF, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Foundation, Africare, Direct Relief and Airlink. UPS also assisted MedShare in moving ocean containers with hospital beds bound for Africa, and coordinated the shipment of medical supplies and personal protection equipment donated by UPS customers like Henry Schein that were urgently needed by health care workers.

Responding to the Ebola Outbreak

UPS provided $750,000 in funding, technical and in-kind support to address the unprecedented Ebola outbreak in West Africa. In total, 932 metric tons of relief supplies were moved to support 40 humanitarian relief organizations’ efforts.

Humanitarian Relief & Resilience Program

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Post-Crisis RecoveryRecovering from a crisis can be even tougher than enduring it. To make the process easier, The UPS Foundation provides resources and expertise that help disaster-stricken areas recover and rebuild more quickly and efficiently. In supporting the Salvation Army, UNICEF and UNHCR, The UPS Foundation is helping the people of the Philippines recover from Typhoon Haiyan. With the help of humanitarian relief agencies, Filipino families are putting their lives back together and restoring a sense of normalcy in their communities.

Photo credit: ©UNHCR/P.Behan

On November 8, 2013, Typhoon Haiyan hit the Philippines, affecting 14 million people and causing extensive property damage. Joel Lacaba and his family were separated by the storm, as Joel was swept seven kilometers away by the tidal surge.

His wife and children were safe in a shelter, but their home was destroyed. When they reunited as a family, their search for water, food and shelter began. Thanks to emergency funding from The UPS Foundation, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) had aid on the way almost immediately. The UPS Foundation grant provided cash for the purchase of solar lanterns, tents and protection kits. One year later, Joel is building a new home, his wife has completed her training to become a teacher and their children no longer fear every storm that approaches.

As Filipino families began putting their lives back together, The UPS Foundation looked for an opportunity to help. Through a grant to the Salvation Army, over 30,000 coconut seedlings have been distributed to more than 600 farmers across the country. It’s expected that a total of 89,000 seedlings will be planted across the Philippines by at least 1,500 farmers. While these seedlings will take six to eight years to mature, the Salvation Army will also distribute vegetable and peanut seedlings for the farmers to plant in early 2015. The expected yields from these plants will begin in only three months.

In addition to food and shelter, the education infrastructure of the country was badly damaged. Through UNICEF, UPS and The UPS Foundation assisted local schools with their recovery efforts, including the transportation of 41 metric tons of supplies — desks, chairs, computers, bookshelves,

copiers, iron sheets for school construction and books for libraries.

For those affected by natural disasters, the hardest work begins after the emergency, when media attention has been diverted elsewhere. Through its work with organizations committed to rebuilding vital infrastructure and restoring livelihoods, The UPS Foundation fills an important role in restoring hope, confidence and a sense of community.

Helping the Philippines Rebuild

“My personal hope for my family is to let my children finish their studies — all three of them. The solar lamp, provided by UNHCR, is a great help for studying when it gets dark. We have no other source of light during the night. So I’m really thankful!” says Algina Lacaba.

Humanitarian Relief & Resilience Program

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UPS Road Code®

The UPS Foundation teamed with the Boys & Girls Clubs of America to launch UPS Road Code® in 2009. The program prepares young drivers for road hazards not addressed in traditional driver education courses, enabling teens to become safety ambassadors and catalysts for change within their families and their networks. Today UPS Road Code has expanded outside of the United States to Canada, China, Germany and the United Kingdom. More than 250 UPS employee volunteers teach the program around the world.

The Richard England Clubhouse #14, Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Washington, faces many challenges in its efforts to reach local teenagers. Families in the surrounding Washington D.C. neighborhood have an income that is $16,697 below the 2013 U.S. median household.

Whitney Sweetwine, the local Boys & Girls Clubs Teen Director, values what the UPS Road Code® safe driving program brings. Most teenagers in the course arrive with little or no safe driving knowledge. With a goal of reach-ing 100 students, this Boys & Girls Club enrolled 103 students in the safe driving program. More importantly, every one of them graduated from the training.

The program’s impact is based on a comparison of the safe driving knowledge pre-test and the significantly improved post-test scores. “Watching the videos really inspired me to not be a victim of distracted driving. I vow to not do any of the things I saw in the video,” said one 15-year-old student.

That’s a message that resonated with Sweetwine. “My sister definitely needed to attend, because she is 16 years old and that is the age at which D.C. teens are eligible to get their learner’s permits and provisional licenses,” she said. “Two of my high school friends were killed in car accidents in 2013 and 2014, so I wanted to make sure she was prepared and knew the definition of safe driving.”

Sweetwine also wants the UPS Road Code graduates to be “ambassadors for safe driving.” They understand and can articulate the importance of not compromising safe

methods when driving — especially when in the car with friends and siblings. Already, the safe driving ambassadors have recruited other teenagers to take the course. In addition, the graduates are sharing notices about Road Code and its benefits on Facebook, Instagram and other social media outlets.

Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Washington

“It gives my child the ability to learn new things and allows her to do something positive instead of being on the streets,” says the mother of UPS Road Code graduate Rhonice Miles.

Global Road Safety

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Global Road SafetyFleet Forum was formed in 2003 to encourage, facilitate and develop relationships between humanitarian aid and development organizations all over the world. Fleet Forum brings together those who play a role in road safety to help save lives. It has grown to an organization of 40 members, including commercial transportation road safety, green practices and fleet efficiency. With its rich history in road safety, UPS began working with Fleet Forum to examine ways of reducing the number of traffic fatalities occurring around the world. Support from The UPS Foundation allows Fleet Forum and its partners to provide road safety training and education programs to begin addressing this significant problem, especially in low- to middle-income countries.

Devraj Singh runs a tea stall in the Jawahar Nagar slum in Jaipur, India, where he lives with his wife. One year ago, he lost his only son in a horrifying road accident in front of his shop. The 11-year-old was struck by a transport truck while crossing the road and was killed instantly. Singh and his wife have never been the same.

Every hour, more than 26 people die on India’s roads, many of them children. But while road accidents deliver a devastating blow to families and society at large, road safety education for children under 12 is not an integral part of India’s school curriculum. As a result, there is a heightened risk of children being involved in a road traffic accident with potentially fatal consequences.

To address that gap, Fleet Forum collaborated with a local charity in Jaipur to develop and implement a Child Road Safety Education Package for school-age children living in and around Singh’s neighborhood. The program, which is financially supported by The UPS Foundation, is designed to increase safe road traffic behavior among children through a combination of classroom-based learning, outdoor exercises, community events, volunteer efforts and parent meetings. Each element of the training was developed collaboratively, with input from children, teachers, parents and community members.

The results of the program have been positive. The 800 school children who participated in the Child Road Safety Education Package demonstrate much safer road traffic behavior today. More than 70 percent are now aware of and understand traffic rules and signs, compared to 35 percent of children in other schools. Additionally, about 95 percent of participating children now play in safer areas, such as in parks or at home, compared to the 59 percent

of children in other schools who continue to play close to busy, high-traffic roads.

An unexpected outcome of the program was the impact on the parents of participating children. Today, 86 percent of these parents now wear a helmet when they ride a motorcycle or scooter, compared to an average of 15 percent among other parents.

Fleet Forum

The 800 school children who participated in the Child Road Safety Education Package demonstrate much safer road traffic behavior today. More than 70 percent are now aware of and understand traffic rules and signs, compared to 35 percent of children in other schools.

Global Road Safety

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VolunteerismPromoting volunteerism and building nonprofit capacity

Volunteerism is an integral part of UPS company culture. UPSers are committed to making the world a better place, and they demonstrate that commitment every year through their volunteerism.

Almost 1.9 million volunteer hours

from UPS employees and their friends and

families in 2014

$6.4 million invested

in organizations that embody volunteerism

By the end of 2020, UPS pledges

20 million hours of volunteerism and community service

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Our PledgeIn June 2014, UPS took the bold step of announcing a pledge to complete 20 million hours of global volunteerism and community service by the end of 2020. The move reinforces the company’s corporate giving strategy and its commitment to volunteering and philanthropic efforts that advance and enrich communities around the world. Upon achieving this goal, UPS’s total volunteer hours will increase more than 12 percent and nonprofits will receive volunteer assistance valued at more than $460 million*.

*Source: Based on U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics May 2013 National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates, www.bls.gov

UPS Global Employee Volunteerism

Volunteerism is a part of UPS culture and a source of pride for UPS employees around the world. Giving means more than writing a check. It means combining employees’ skill, passion and time with our logistics expertise, transportation assets and charitable donations to make a measurable difference in society.

In 2014 UPS employees, their friends and families volunteered nearly 1.9 million hours in their local communities. From those who hit the ground running in areas hard hit by natural disasters, to those who roll up their sleeves on weekends to help strengthen local communities, thousands of lives were impacted for the better. The economic impact of UPS volunteer efforts in communities across the globe in 2014 was nearly $49 million.

Volunteerism is a year-round priority, and each October in celebration of UPS’s Global Volunteer Month, UPS work groups engage in team projects, in addition to individual employees who help out at organizations where they volunteer year round.

UPS employees volunteer at Points of Light 2014 National Conference on Volunteerism and Service where CEO David Abney announced UPS’s pledge to complete 20 million hours of global volunteerism and community service by the end of 2020.

“ To put reward ahead of service is like putting the trailer before the tractor. Consider the added satisfaction of life as a whole if we put emphasis on what we are contributing, rather than on what we are getting.”

— James E. Casey, UPS Founder

Volunteerism

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Every October, UPSers around the world come together to give back to their communities as part of UPS Global Volunteer Month. In the rural community of Saraburi province in Thailand, more than 180 UPSers, friends, family members and villagers volunteered at the Wat Ban Lum School in rural Thailand. Despite the lack of local resources and financial backing, the school’s principal is working very hard to gather the support needed to help the 50 children in the village who attend Wat Ban Lum School.

Working together with the Youth Federation of World Peace, UPS planned a day of service to improve the school’s facilities by painting the school building, gardening, and cleaning surrounding areas to create a better environment for the children to learn. Volunteers also had the opportunity to work with the local children — teaching them how to draw pictures.

“The work made us realize that having a school where the students want to come to study and spend their time will help keep them away from social problems outside of school,” says UPS Thailand HR Specialist Varong Tangkitphithakphon. “Doing what is best for the children is what keeps us doing these volunteer activities, no matter how tired we are or how hot the weather is. We know that every activity we do, every minute we spend, really does count.”

In total, UPSers in Thailand contributed 1,098 hours towards revitalizing the school, one of thousands of service projects that occur each year during Global Volunteer Month.

Volunteers in Thailand Head Back to School

UPSers in Thailand contributed nearly 1,100 hours towards revitalizing the Wat Ban Lum School in the rural community of Saraburi province.

Volunteerism

Virgil Banker is a Korean War Veteran who enlisted in the Army in 1948 and served in Korea from November 1950 to April 1952 along with his three brothers. He earned two medals during his service in Korea. “They call Korea ‘The Forgotten War.’ We didn’t get any parades or hero’s welcome,” said Virgil. When Virgil and his family fell on hard times recently due to chronic medical issues and prolonged unemployment, nearly 50 UPS volunteers from the Illinois District descended on Virgil’s quiet residential neighborhood in Bolingbrook, IL to transform his neglected split-level house and property. His wife Jessie is bedridden and his two daughters live with them and help care for the elderly couple. But no one in the household is physically capable of maintaining the outside of the home. That’s where UPSers saw a need they could fill. Volunteers focused on outdoor improvements including taking down an old fence, pulling weeds, cleaning and building flower beds, digging up old pavers, painting, trimming trees, planting flowers and shrubs, laying sod and gutter cleaning. “Unbelievable...I’m flabbergasted,” said Virgil as he stood in his driveway watching the team of UPSers sweep across his property, transforming everything in their path. “There are just no words. This is fantastic. I had no idea UPS did anything like this.” In looking for a Memorial Day volunteer effort, UPS Manager Dale Norris had contacted several local agencies to find a veteran that needed assistance. Commander Robert Adams of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #5917 directed him to Virgil. Virgil’s daughters, Kathy and Judy,

said they were in disbelief when Dale first visited with them to ask if they would allow UPSers to come help with their outdoor projects. “We were in tears and we just grabbed him and hugged him,” said Kathy, who recently survived a bout with cancer and a heart attack. After four hours of the team working at the typical brisk UPS work pace, the property makeover was complete.

“There were times when I’ve wondered why the heck I put that uniform on,” Virgil said. “This is one of the reasons why I’m glad I did.”

UPS Volunteers Tim Bingham (left) and Avis Gibson (right) pictured with Korean War Veteran, Commander Virgil Banker (center).

Volunteerism

Stepping Up to Help Local Veterans

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Local Community GrantsEngaging communities where UPS employees live and work

The UPS Foundation supports the ongoing community engagement of UPS employees by providing grants to local charitable organizations. An organization becomes eligible for funding after UPSers invest 50 hours or more of community service towards its programs.

Over $9 million invested in local

community grants around the world

156 international nonprofits

supported through local community grants

603 nonprofit organizations

in over 50 countries supported through

local community grants

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Olmsted Parks ConservancyOlmsted Parks Conservancy’s mission is to restore, enhance and protect Louisville’s Olmsted-designed parks and parkways, helping to connect nature and the neighborhood while strengthening the community’s well-being. Olmsted Parks Conservancy operates the Park Steward and Junior Park Steward Training Programs, which engage volunteers in a leadership capacity through environmental education and hands-on project work. UPS employees have committed hundreds of volunteer hours to the Conservancy since 2006.

Louisville, Kentucky is home to a system of 18 parks and six parkways designed more than a century ago by the “Father of American Landscape Architecture,” Frederick Law Olmsted. To protect this legacy, Olmsted Parks Conservancy works in partnership with the Louisville Metro Parks Department to preserve these historic green spaces, while also protecting the urban environment and enhancing the entire community’s well-being. Private funds raised by the Conservancy are essential for keeping the Olmsted Parks at the high standard they deserve, especially as the city budget is stretched to meet all of its priorities.

Since 2006, UPS employees have been doing their part throughout Metro Louisville with hundreds of volunteer hours spent planting trees, removing invasive species and repairing park structures in the Olmsted Parks. The UPS Foundation took this steadfast commitment to the environ-ment a step further in 2014 by awarding the Conservancy a grant for its Park Steward and Junior Park Steward Volunteer Training Programs. The Conservancy created these two programs, for adults and teenagers respectively, to develop everyday volunteers into leaders.

At no cost to them, participants receive in-depth class-room and site-based education on several topics, from Olmsted’s design principles to plant identification techniques. Once training is completed, certified Park Stewards are encouraged to lead park restoration and cleanup activities, guide park tours, conduct monitoring and maintenance projects, and represent the Conservancy at community outreach events. More than 120 participants, including

two UPSers, have completed the program since its inception in 2011. Recent funding from The UPS Foundation ensured the overall continuation of the program and will enable the Conservancy to train up to 40 new Park Stewards before the end of 2015. It will also allow for enhancements to the core training curriculum, continuing education opportunities for existing Park Stewards, and greater program visibility throughout the community.

Supporting Volunteer Leaders in Louisville

“Just like UPS’s commitment to sustainability, Olmsted Parks Conservancy seeks to ensure that Louisville’s Olmsted Parks will remain viable and enjoyable places for future generations,” said John Walsh, Conservancy Park Steward and UPS airlines pilot.

Local Community Grants

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Magic Bus FoundationMagic Bus develops local community mentors who take children and youth living in poverty on the journey from childhood to livelihood. It’s a long-term engagement that’s creating competent, confident young people ready to make a significant difference in their own lives. The volunteer efforts of UPSers and financial support from The UPS Foundation are helping them make it happen. The Magic Bus’ vision is to give millions of children living in poverty the opportunity to control the way they view the world, the freedom to choose the role they will play in it and the power to define their own destiny.

Like many other girls growing up in India, 9-year-old Nikita did not know what it was like to go to school, read a story or write one of her own. She was too busy taking care of her younger brother at home. Her parents are daily wage laborers and the local brick kiln is their only source of steady employment, but at just $3.25 a day, their income is never enough to live on.

The family of five lives in Chane, a small tribal-dominated village in Bhiwandi, Maharashtra. Six months ago, when Magic Bus started working in Bhiwandi, the most pressing problem was that of children dropping out of school, especially girls. Most of them were filling in for their parents at home and taking care of household chores. The only way out of the situation was to increase awareness among the parents about the merits of formal education.

A member of the Magic Bus staff, Devendra Patil, started engaging with Nikita’s parents. Over a period of time, he built up a rapport and understanding with her parents, gradually convincing them that giving her an education was the only real way to move the family out of extreme poverty. Once Nikita began attending Magic Bus sessions, her parents noticed real changes in their daughter’s behavior and attitude. In a few months, Nikita started going to school regularly and taking an interest in her studies.

Through a local grant from The UPS Foundation, the Magic Bus Foundation has been able to expand its operations and impact more children like Nikita. UPS employees

in India volunteer with the organization as mentors and teach the importance of education, hygiene and gender equity while enhancing each child’s life-skills and preparing them for future success.

Creating Change in Bhiwandi

Magic Bus operates in 10 states across the country, helping more than 250,000 children through mentoring and activity-based learning.

“When we go into a community and start out by playing together, it melts differences and makes us all part of a ‘can-do’ attitude.” says Magic Bus Community Leader, Ashish.

Local Community Grants

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Casey ScholarshipsBringing the dream of a college education closer to reality

UPS has a long history of supporting education initiatives. UPS’s James E. Casey Scholarship Program makes access to higher education possible for many children of UPS employees around the world.

Americas Brazil Canada Chile Colombia Dominican Republic El Salvador Mexico Panama Peru

APAC China Indonesia Korea Malaysia Philippines Singapore Taiwan Thailand Vietnam Europe Belgium France Germany Hungary Italy Netherlands Poland Portugal Russian Fed Spain Turkey United Kingdom Ismea India Nigeria South Africa United States

Canada

Brazil

Chile

Colombia

Dominican Republic

El Salvador

Mexico

Panama

Peru

China

Indonesia

Korea

Malaysia

Phillippines

Taiwan

Singapore

Thailand

VietnamIndia

Nigeria

South Africa

United States

Belgium

France

Germany

Hungary

Italy

Turkey

Netherlands

Portugal Spain

United Kingdom

Poland

Russia

Launched in 1963 and named in honor of UPS’s founder, the James E. Casey Scholarship Program was designed to provide merit-based scholarships to the children of UPS employees planning to attend a four-year college. Over the course of the last half century, the program was expanded to include the children of employees in Canada and Mexico. In 2013, it was announced that the program would expand once again to be accessible to children of UPSers living in 72 countries across the globe.

The International James E. Casey Scholarships are awarded based on academic accomplishments, extracurricular activities, community involvement and an applicant appraisal. The awards may be used for educational expenses like tuition, housing and books. Through 2014, more than 3,800 students have received a Casey Scholarship.

International James E. Casey Scholarship Program

In its inaugural year, the James E. Casey Scholarship expansion provided access to higher education for children of UPSers in 33 countries around the world.

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Among the first beneficiaries of the expanded James E. Casey Scholarship Program is Thailand’s Kanchana (Pearl) Loysawai. Pearl is a first-year student at Thammasat University in Thailand, where she is studying political science. The eldest daughter of UPS’s Somboon Loysawai, who is a member of the ocean freight team in Thailand, Pearl grew up loving books and envisioned a career as a medical doctor.

That all changed when Pearl was a teenager, she saw an ambassador on television and was immediately impressed by the way he spoke and presented himself. She learned more about the role of ambassadors and international politics and is now committed to becoming a diplomat herself one day.

“I want to use all my knowledge to help people,” she said. “The challenge of working with citizens from around the world and maintaining good relations while working to solve human rights issues is admirable and important. I want to raise awareness about the importance of human rights everywhere.”

Pearl began her studies in the fall of 2014 and has embraced university life. “Living and studying at university is a perfect role play for teenagers in that it prepares us to be adults who are able to adjust and live successfully in society,” she said. “I’m gaining knowledge not only for my future career, but for living a happy life in my community.”

Being awarded a Casey Scholarship was a proud day for Pearl, her family and the extended UPS family across Thailand. The scholarship funds enabled Pearl to attend a top-tier university and move one step closer to realizing her dream. “I was so proud to be recognized as a Casey Scholar and to embark on this important phase of my life,” said Pearl. “I’m really thankful to UPS for their confidence in my abilities. I will make the most of this opportunity to better myself and give back to society as soon as I am able.”

2014 James E. Casey Scholarship Winner: Kanchana Loysawai, Thailand

Scholarships

As a young boy, Ravideep Boparai wanted to turn his paper airplanes into real ones. Thanks in part to his Casey Scholarship, he’s one step closer to fulfilling his childhood interest of working in the aeronautics industry.

Ravideep is the son of area sales manager Raj Boparai, and began his mechanical engineering studies at the University of Toronto in the fall of 2014. He will specialize in aeronautics and aeronautical design with his sights set on one day working for NASA or Boeing. “Ideally I will be building and designing aircraft for space travel with the hopes of making this adventure more affordable and practical for everyone,” he said.

He developed his interest in engineering by watching his grandfather take apart electronics in the family’s garage. He was inspired to excel in his education and graduated as an honor student from his secondary school. He served as president of the school council, participated in the international business technology program, and was a founding member of the school’s science club.

For Ravideep, reaching for the clouds was never enough; he loves to soar among them while piloting a Cessna 172 Skyhawk. He’s only just begun his pilot lessons, but he loves the challenge and is focused on earning his license while still in school. “Flying a little plane by yourself is so exciting,” he said. “It’s an adventure full of skill, thrill and exhilaration! Flying invigorates your spirit and gives you an elevated sense of freedom.”

When he’s not darting across the sky at 120 knots, Ravideep is settling into his life on campus. The spirit and traditions of the university’s engineering society caught his attention, and he is among the newest members of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, where he hopes to polish his leadership and social skills.

Ravideep is grateful for the support the Casey Scholarship provides. “Education is so important, but it also comes with a steep price,” he said. “I am so fortunate to have been selected for this award, and it will help me fulfill my goal of one day becoming an industry leader.”

Scholarships

2014 James E. Casey Scholarship Winner: Ravideep Boparai, Canada

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United WaySharing a commitment to strengthening communities

UPS and UPS employees — both active and retired — have donated more than $1 billion to United Way since 1982. As the first company to reach this philanthropic milestone, we are proud to continue assisting United Way as it seeks to improve education and financial stability and promote healthy lives.

Imagine legions of passionate hockey fans filling the seats at a Boston Bruins game. More than 17,000 spectators have come for some hard-earned rest and relaxation, but what if they somehow left that arena with new skills that would help them secure gainful employment and take care of their families in the long-term? United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley has actually helped more lives than that.

Here’s how it works: with support from UPS, United Way and partners have brought together a cadre of volunteer experts who connect people to much-needed financial services. At United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley’s four convenient financial help centers, these volunteers provide a wide array of indispensable services that include financial education and coaching, career training, job search assistance, credit counseling, free tax preparation assistance, and more. This innovative approach is a key element of United Way’s strategy to help families become financially stable and secure.

It’s a program that aligns well with UPS’s focus on improving communities where UPS employees live and work. To date, 13,000 people have gained essential job skills to advance in their careers, 2,546 people have gained English proficiency, and 4,000 people have obtained employment.

The financial help centers have made a difference in the lives of many people like Julio Cepeda, whose computer training empowered him to manage his own small business. Liz Cintron, who learned how to save money

Helping Families Achieve Financial Stability

To date, 13,000 people have gained essential job skills to advance in their careers, 2,546 people have gained English proficiency, and 4,000 people have obtained employment.

when she was still in high school and now attends Georgetown University, and Nancy Reyes, who got the advice she needed to avoid foreclosure and stay in her home.

United Way

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100 Black Men of America Atlanta, GA100 Black Men of Atlanta Atlanta, GA100 Black Men of South Florida Miami, FLA New Way of Life Reentry Project Los Angeles, CAA Wish With Wings Fort Worth, TXABC House Albany, ORAbility Connection Colorado Denver, COAbout Special Kids Indianapolis, INAbrazos Family Support Services Bernalillo, NMAccessAbility Minneapolis, MNACCION International Boston, MAAction for Agricultural Renewal in Maharashtra Pune, IndiaActs Full Gospel Christian Academy Oakland, CAAdaptive Adventures Boulder, COAdelante Hispanic Achievers Louisville, KYAdvertising Council New York, NY Advocates for Bartow’s Children Cartersville, GA Aeon Minneapolis, MN African Leadership Foundation San Francisco, CAAfricare Washington, D.C. After-School All-Stars Ohio Columbus, OH Aging Care Connections LaGrange, IL AIDS Community Resources Syracuse, NY AIDS Walk Atlanta Atlanta, GA Aiken Area Council On Aging Aiken, SC Alameda County Community Food Bank Oakland, CA Alexander Graham Bell Assoc. for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Washington, D.C. Aliveness Project Minneapolis, MN All Grown Up Stockbridge, GA Alma G. Davis Foundation Duluth, GA Alpha Boys School Kingston, Jamaica American Assoc. of Occupational Health Nurses Foundation Pensacola, FLAmerican Cancer Society - Hackensack Hackensack, NJAmerican Cancer Society - Southeast Division Duluth, GAAmerican Corporate Partners New York, NYAmerican Heart Association - Greater Washington Region Arlington, VAAmerican Heart Association - Miami Valley Division Miami, FLAmerican Indian College Fund Denver, COAmerican Jewish Committee Atlanta, GAAmerican Legion Massapequa, NYAmerican Logistics Aid Network Lombard, ILAmerican Marketing Association Birmingham, ALAmerican National Red Cross - Hawaii State Chapter Honolulu, HIAmerican National Red Cross - Minnesota Region Minneapolis, MNAmerican National Red Cross Headquarters Washington, D.C.American Society of Safety Engineers Foundation Des Plaines, ILAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Association Minneapolis, MNAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Association San Diego, CAAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Association Wauwatosa, WIAngela Hospice Home Care Livonia, MIAngkor Resource Center Riverdale, GAAnti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith Philadelphia, PAAntioch Baptist Church/Antioch Senior Center Columbia, SC

Apa Family Support Services San Francisco, CAApple Patch Community Crestwood, KYArea Churches Together Serving Aiken, SCArizona Zoological Society Phoenix, AZAsia Injury Prevention Foundation Hanoi City, VietnamAsia Institute Louisville, KYAsian American Resource Foundation Duluth, GAAsian Pacific American Legal Center of Southern California Los Angeles, CAAsociacion Benefica Ruwasunchis Lima, PeruAsociacion Pro Personas con Discapacidad Intelectual Valencia, SpainAsociatia Ana si Copiii Bucharest, RomaniaAspira of America Washington, D.C.Assistance League of Long Beach Long Beach, CAAssociacao Prato Cheio Sao Paulo, BrazilAssociation Action Passeraile Paris, FranceAssociation for Women In Aviation Maintenance Edgewater, FLAssociation of St. Augustine Alumni Atlanta, GAAssociazione Italiana Persone Down Pisa, ItalyAtlanta Center for Self Sufficiency Atlanta, GAAtlanta Community Toolbank Atlanta, GAAtlanta Legal Aid Society Atlanta, GAAtlanta Mission Atlanta, GAAtlanta Police Foundation Atlanta, GAAtlanta Ronald McDonald House Charities Atlanta, GAAtlanta Symphony Orchestra Atlanta, GAAtlanta Track Club . Atlanta, GAAtlanta Women’s Network Atlanta, GAAtlanta Youth Wind Symphony Foundation Atlanta, GAAufbruch, Broad-Based Community Organizing in Deutschland e.V Berlin, GermanyAutism Queensland Limited Sunnybank Hills, AustraliaAvondale Education Association - The Museum School Decatur, GAAyodhya Charitable Trust Pune, IndiaBack On My Feet Atlanta, GABackPack Attack Indianapolis, INBack-To-School Clothing Drive Association Phoenix, AZBal Kalyan Sanstha Pune Pune, IndiaBASA Aeronautical School Lake Worth, FLBatey Relief Alliance Santo Domingo, Dominican RepublicBeijing Youth Development Foundation Beijing, ChinaBethesda Community Clinic Canton, GABetter World Fund, United Nations Association Washington, D.C.Beyond The Spectrum Sarasota, FLBhatkya Vimukta Jati Shikshan Sanstha Pune, India

Big Brothers Big Sisters of East Tennessee Knoxville, TN

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Kentuckiana Louisville, KY

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta Atlanta, GA

Big Brothers Big Sisters of North Texas Irving, TX

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Northwestern Ohio Toledo, OH

Big Brothers Big Sisters of The Capital Region Harrisburg, PA

Big Brothers Big Sisters of The Triangle Morrisville, NC

Bio-BrotBox Berlin, Germany

Biological Station House Burgel Monheim am Rhein, Germany

Blackburn Center Greensburg, PA

Blossoming Vines Lithia Springs, GABoard of Trustee of the Glide Foundation San Francisco, CA BoardSource Washington, D.C. Bobby Nichols Fiddlesticks Charity Foundation Fort Myers, FL Bon Secours Richmond Health Care Foundation Richmond, VA Boy Scouts of America - Circle Ten Council Dallas, TXBoys & Girls Clubs of America Atlanta, GABoys & Girls Clubs of Canada Markham, CanadaBoys & Girls Clubs of Cleveland Cleveland, OHBoys & Girls Clubs of Greater Dallas Dallas, TXBoys & Girls Clubs of Hudson County Jersey City, NJBoys & Girls Clubs of Kentuckiana Louisville, KYBoys & Girls Clubs of Los Angeles Los Angeles, CABoys & Girls Clubs of North San Mateo County San Francisco, CABoys & Girls Clubs of South Queens Richmond Hill, NYBoys & Girls Clubs of the Midlands Omaha, NEBoys Town California Santa Ana, CABrigham Young University Provo, UTBright Kid Foundation Johannesburg, South AfricaBrightside Foundation Louisville, KYBritish Heart Foundation London, United KingdomBrotherhood Crusade Los Angeles, CA Broward Children’s Center Pompano Beach, FL Building The Fire Within Richmond, VA Businesses United In Investing, Lending and Development Boston, MA Butterfly Foundation Spartanburg, SC Cabbage Patch Settlement House Louiville, KY Cable Foundation Nashville, TN Caherline National School Limerick, Ireland Cambridge Community Services Cambridge, MA Camp Aldersgate Little Rock, AR Cape Coral Community Foundation Cape Coral, FL Caponi Art Park Eagan, MN Captain Planet Foundation Atlanta, GA CARE USA Atlanta, GA Caritas Richmond, VA Caritas der Erzdiozese Wien Hilfe in NOT Vienna, Austria Caroline Friess Center Baltimore, MDCarter Center Atlanta, GACASA Association of The Fifth Judicial District Cody, WYCASA Kane County Geneva, ILCASA of Terrebonne Houma, LACatalyst for Women New York, NYCatholic Charities Weinberg Housing Resource Center Baltimore, MDCatholic Community Services of Utah Salt Lake City, UTCCF Community Initiatives Fund Los Angeles, CACecily’s Closet Cardiff, CACenter for Disaster Philanthropy Washington, D.C.Center for Independence Through Conductive Education Countryside, ILCenter for Independent Living of Broward Fort Lauderdale, FLCenter for Nonprofit Excellence Louisville, KYCenter for Prevention and Counseling Newton, NJCenter for Talent Innovation New York, NY

Center for Women & Enterprises Boston, MACenter KORAK Kranj, SloveniaCentral Pennsylvania Food Bank Harrisburg, PACentro De Cirugia Especial De Mexico, IAP Mexico City, MexicoCentro de Servicious Maria de los Angeles San Juan, Puerto RicoCereCare Wellness Center for Children Shanghai, ChinaCeres Boston, MAChange Happens Houston, TXCharities Aid Foundation India New Delhi, IndiaCharlotte Center for Urban Ministry Charlotte, NCCharter for Accelerated Learning Indianapolis, INChensenmei Social Welfare Foundation Zhongli City, TaiwanChicago Police Memorial Foundation Chicago, ILChicanos Por La Causa Phoenix, AZChief Executive Leadership Institute of the Yale School of Management New Haven, CTChild Abuse Prevention Association Independence, MOChild Advocate Network Avondale Estates, GAChild Advocates of San Bernardino County Rialto, CAChild Life Line Lagos, NigeriaChildhood & Family Learning Foundation New Orleans, LAChildren’s Aid and Family Services Paramus, NJChildren’s Fund for Health, Ltd. Dublin, IrelandChildren’s Harbor Pembroke Pines, FLChildren’s Healthcare of Atlanta Foundation Atlanta, GAChildren’s Hunger Alliance Columbus, OHChildSavers Richmond, VAChina Foundation for Poverty Alleviation Beijing, ChinaChina Population Welfare Foundation Beijing, ChinaChinatown Community Development Center San Francisco, CACHOICES Education Group Seattle, WAChong Wa Education Society Seattle, WAChosen 300 Ministries Philadelphia, PAChristel House de Mexico Mexico City, MexicoChristmas in October Kansas City, MOCircle Center Adult Day Services Richmond, VACIRIUS Kamnik Kamnik, SloveniaCitizens Caring for Children Oklahoma City, OKCitizenship Education Fund Atlanta, GACity of Refuge Atlanta, GACivil Air Patrol Latham, NYClark Atlanta University Atlanta, GAClark Road Genesis Family Center Gary, INClarksville Association for Down Syndrome Clarksville, TNClean Air Campaign Atlanta, GAClean Air Initiative for Asian Cities Center Pasig City, PhilippinesColegio Andalue de Maipu San Jose, ChileComitato Maria Letizia Verga Onlus Monza, ItalyCommittee to Encourage Corporate Philanthropy New York, NYCommunity Alliance for the Homeless Memphis, TNCommunity Assistance Center Sandy Springs, GACommunity Foundation of Carroll County Westminster, MDCommunity Land Cooperative of Cincinnati Cincinnati, OHCommunity LINC Kansas City, MOCommunity Services Program Santa Ana, CA

2014 Foundation Funding Recipients 2014 Foundation Funding RecipientsORGANIZATION LOCATION ORGANIZATION LOCATIONORGANIZATION LOCATION ORGANIZATION LOCATION

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Community Storehouse Fort Worth, TXCommunity Youth Center of San Francisco San Francisco, CAConcordia Learning Center at St. Joseph’s School for the Blind Jersey City, NJCongressional Black Caucus Foundation Washington, D.C.Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute Washington, D.C.Consejo Renal de Puerto Rico San Juan, Puerto RicoCornerstone Services Joliet, ILCouncil for Economic Education New York, NYCouncil of Independent Colleges Washington, D.C.Council on Foundations Arlington, VACourt Appointed Special Advocates of Imperial County El Centro, CACradles To Crayons West Conshohocken, PACreate Your Dreams Atlanta, GACreative Teachers Carson, CACreche Popular do Monte de Caparica Monte de Caparica, PortugalCrohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America Atlanta, GACross Keys Human Services Brownsville, PACrossBridge . Nashville, TNC-STEM Teacher and Student Support Services Houston, TXCSULB 49er Foundation Long Beach, CACuban American National Council Miami, FLCypress Hills Child Care Corporation Brooklyn, NYDaily Living Centers Bethany, OKDakota Woodlands Eagan, MNDemetrious Johnson Charitable Foundation Ballwin, MODistrict Alliance for Safe Housing Washington, D.C.Dogs for the Disabled Bandbury, United KingdomDonorsChoose.org New York, NYDown Syndrome Association Singapore Singapore, SingaporeDown Syndrome of Louisville Louisville, KYDragonfly Forest Conshohocken, PADream Corps Unlimited Oakland, CADrug Enforcement Administration Survivors Benefit Fund Roswell, GADurban Children’s Home Durban, South AfricaEarth Day Network Washington, D.C.Earthwatch Institute Boston, MAEaster Seals DuPage & Fox Valley Region Villa Park, ILEconomic Empowerment Initiative Atlanta, GAEden Social Welfare Foundation Taipei City, TaiwanEdgewood Children’s Ranch Orlando, FLEducation for Development Ho Chi Minh City, VietnamElderHelp of San Diego San Diego, CAEmergency Shelter Richmond, VAEmergency Shelter of Northern Kentucky Covington, KYEnable Ireland Disability Services Dublin, IrelandEqual Justice Works Washington, D.C.Erie Homes for Children and Adults Erie, PAEssex & Herts Air Ambulance Trust Colchester, United KingdomExecutive Committee of the Baptist Convention of the State of Georgia Lithia Springs, GAExecutive Leadership Foundation Alexandria, VAFairness Education Fund Louisville, KYFamily Life Center Louisville, KYFamily Lifeline Richmond, VA

Family Summit Foundation Ogden, UTFarm Rescue Jamestown, NDFeed My Starving Children Coon Rapids, MNFeedMore Richmond, VAFeltham Bees Disabled Sports Club Feltham, United KingdomFernbank Museum of Natural History Atlanta, GAFIA Foundation - Road Safety Fund London, United KingdomFinnish Red Cross Helsinki, FinlandFirst Ward Community Service Saginaw, MIFlood Student Missions Alpharetta, GAFlorida International University Foundation Miami, FLFondation Royaumont Asnieres Sur Oise, FranceFondazione Ambienta Milano, ItalyFondazione Stefano ed Angela Danelli Onlus Lodi, ItalyFörderkreis der Evangelischen Stiftung Alsterdorf Hamburg, GermanyForderverein des Katholischen Kindergartens Herne-Bornig Herne, GermanyForderverein fur das Kinderhospiz Sternenbrucke Hamburg, GermanyForeign Press Association Scholarship Fund New York, NYForsyth County Young Life Cumming, GAFoundation Center New York, NYFoundation Stonie Na Balkonie Lodz, PolandFrancisco Parent Teacher Organization San Francisco, CA Friends of Homeless Veterans San Diego, CA Friends of the Upland Public Library Upland, CA Frontiers of Flight Museum Dallas, TX Fu Hong Society Sham Shui Po, Hong KongFundacio Privada Rosella Castellvi de Rosanes, SpainFundacion Casa Ronald McDonald de Colombia Bogota, Colombia Fundacion Cruzada Patagonica Junin de los Andes, ArgentinaFundacion Gonzalo Rodríguez Montevideo, Uruguay Fundacion para la Infancia Ronald McDonald Las Condes, Chile Fundacion Peruana de Cancer Lima, Peru Fundacja Dobrych Praktyk Warsaw, Poland Fundacja Dzieciom ‘Zdazyc z Pomoca’ Warsaw, Poland Fundacja KAIROS Wroclaw, Poland Fundacja Volunteers for Sport Wroclaw, Poland Fundacja Wroclawskie Hospicjum dla Dzieci Wroclaw, PolandGeorgia Aquarium Foundation Atlanta, GAGeorgia Center for Child Advocacy Atlanta, GAGeorgia Center for Nonprofits Atlanta, GAGeorgia Conservancy Atlanta, GAGeorgia Council on Economic Education Atlanta, GAGeorgia Justice Project Atlanta, GAGeorgia Sheriff’s Association Stockbridge, GAGeorgia State University Foundation Atlanta, GAGeorgia Tech Foundation,. Atlanta, GAGiGi’s Playhouse Urbandale, IAGilgal Atlanta, GAGirl Rethought Project Tamarac, FLGirl Scout Council of the Nation’s Capital Washington, D.C.Girl Scouts of Greater Chicago & Northwest Indiana Chicago, ILGirl Scouts of Southwest Texas San Antonio, TXGirl Up Washington, D.C.

Girls Inc. New York, NYGlenbridge Special School and Resource Center Diep River, South AfricaGlobal Summit of Women Washington, D.C.GlobalWorks Foundation Washington, D.C.Golden Gate Audubon Society Berkeley, CAGolden Harvest Food Bank Augusta, GAGood360 Alexandria, VAGoodwill Industries of Greater Grand Rapids Grand Rapids, MIGrace Fellowship Church Shrewsbury, PAGreat Lakes Recovery Centers Ishpeming, MIGreater Atlanta Chamber Foundation Atlanta, GAGreater Louisville Fund for the Arts Louisville, KYGreater Philadelphia Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Philadelphia, PAGreater Pittsburgh Literacy Council Pittsburgh, PAGreen Pastures and Home Initiatives Kano, NigeriaGreensboro Beautiful Greensboro, NCGuangzhou Huiling Care Center Guangzhou, ChinaGuangzhou Youth Development Foundation Guangzhou, ChinaHabitat for Humanity - Ft. Wayne Fort Wayne, INHabitat for Humanity - Ft. Worth Fort Worth, TXHabitat for Humanity - Greater Indianapolis Indianapolis, INHabitat for Humanity - Greater Nashville Nashville, TNHabitat for Humanity - Hanover Mechanicsville, VAHabitat for Humanity - Hong Kong Hong Kong, Hong KongHabitat for Humanity - Kent County Grand Rapids, MIHabitat for Humanity - Lexington Lexington, KYHabitat for Humanity - MidOhio Columbus, OHHabitat for Humanity - Moncton Moncton, CanadaHabitat for Humanity - Roanoke Valley Roanoke, VAHabitat for Humanity - Salt Lake Valley Salt Lake City, UTHands On Atlanta Atlanta, GAHandsOn Greater Phoenix Phoenix, AZHandsOn Shanghai Shanghai, ChinaHarbor House of Louisville Louisville, KYHartford Interval House Hartford, CTHazard-Perry County Community Ministries Hazard, KYHeal the Bay Santa Monica, CAHealth Support Network Sarasota, FLHeart for Africa Cape Girardeau, MOHelping Hand Center Countryside, ILHenry Street Settlement New York, NYHephzibah Children’s Association Oak Park, ILHermanas Carmelitas Teresas de San Jose Loiza, Puerto RicoHesed House of Hope Lolnton, NCHeuser Hearing & Language Academy Louisville, KYHigh Museum of Art Atlanta, GAHire Heroes USA Alpharetta, GAHispanic American Center for Economic Development Atlanta, GAHispanic Association on Corporate Responsibility Washington, D.C.Hispanic Heritage Foundation Fairfax, VAHispanic Scholarship Fund Gardena, CAHispanic Urban Minority Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Outreach Program Cleveland, OHHKJ Heilpadagogische Kinder- und Jugendhilfe Thuringen gGmbH Gera, GermanyHoag Hospital Foundation Newport Beach, CA

Hogar Albergue Jesus de Nazaret Mayaguez, PRHolistic Community Coalition East Chicago, INHongkong Huiling Limited Guangzhou, ChinaHope Center Lexington, KYHOPE Center Denver, COHorizons South Windham, CTHorses Help Foundation Phoenix, AZHospice & Palliative Care of Louisville Louisville, KYHospice of the Western Reserve Cleveland, OHHouse of Ruth Louisville, KYHouseProud Atlanta Atlanta, GAHouston Parks Board Houston, TXHR Policy Association Washington, D.C.Human Rights Campaign Foundation Washington, D.C.Humanitarian Service Project Carol Stream, ILHunger Task Force Milwaukee, WIiAm Able Fitness Miami, FLIl Carro Cooperativa Sociale Paullo, ItalyIndependence Fund Miami Beach, FLInland Counties Regional Center San Bernardino, CAInnovations for Learning Evanston, ILINROADS Atlanta, GAInstitute for Community Leadership Training and Organizing Kent, WAInstitute for Environmental Innovation Tulsa, OKInstitute of Industrial Engineers Norcross, GAIntegrame A Tue Mundo Santiago de Chile, ChileInteraction - American Council for Voluntary International Action Washington, D.C.Interkulturelle Kitas St.Elisabeth Cologne, GermanyInternational Association for Volunteer Effort Washington, D.C.International Association of Official Human Rights Agencies Washington, D.C.International Guiding Eyes Sylmar, CAInvest in our Children Hialeah, FLIowa Jobs for America’s Graduates Des Moines, IAIsaac W. Bernheim Foundation Clermont, KYIssaquah Schools Foundation Issaquah, WAJack and Jill Children’s Center Fort Lauderdale, FLJames R. Hoffa Memorial Scholarship Fund Washington, D.C.Jane Goodall Institute Shanghai, ChinaJapanese American Citizens League San Francisco, CAJCPenney Cares St. Johns, FLJefferson Community and Technical College Foundation Louisville, KYJefferson County Public Education Foundation Louisville, KYJenesse Center Los Angeles, CAJessie Rees Foundation Broomfield, COJohanniter-Unfall-Hilfe e.V. Berlin, GermanyJohnson County Community College Foundation Overland Park, KSJoseph’s House for Women Syracuse, NYJunior Achievement of Chicago Chicago, ILJunior Achievement of China Beijing, ChinaJunior Achievement of Georgia Atlanta, GAJunior Achievement of Greater St. Louis Chesterfield, MOJunior Achievement of Kentuckiana Louisville, KYJunior Achievement of Middle Tennessee Nashville, TNJunior Achievement of New Jersey Preton, NJ

2014 Foundation Funding Recipients 2014 Foundation Funding RecipientsORGANIZATION LOCATION ORGANIZATION LOCATIONORGANIZATION LOCATION ORGANIZATION LOCATION

5756

Junior Achievement of Oregon & SW Washington Portland, ORJunior Achievement of Rocky Mountain Denver, COJunior Achievement of South Central Pennsylvania York, PAJunior Achievement of Southern Colorado Colorado Springs, COJunior Achievement of Washington Seattle, WAJunior Achievement of Western New York Buffalo, NYJust Call Us Volunteers San Diego, CAKaBOOM! Washington, D.C.KAGIDER Istanbul, TurkeyKairos Prison Ministry International DeBary, FLKanserli Cocuklara Umut Vakfi Istanbul, TurkeyKeep America Beautiful Stamford, CTKentucky Chamber Foundation . Frankfort, KYKentucky Engineering Foundation Frankfort, KYKettering University Flint, MIKids Cancer Alliance Louisville, KYKids Escaping Drugs . West Seneca, NYKimberley L. Martin Foundation Mechanicsville, VAKinderboerderij’t Brinkie Amsterdam, NetherlandsKiss The Toad Creations Danville, CAKoinonia Home for Teens Loomis, CAKorea Green Foundation Seoul, South KoreaKWF Kankerbestrijding Amsterdam, NetherlandsLa Causa Milwaukee, WILab School of Washington Washington, D.C.L’Abbraccio Onlus Arluno, ItalyLacoochee Area Redevelopment Corporation Dade City, FLLaotian American Society Norcross, GALARAMARA Sao Paulo, BrazilLatin American Association Atlanta, GALeadership Atlanta Atlanta, GALeadership Conference Education Fund Washington, D.C.Leadership Louisville Center Louisville, KYLebenshilfe Rhein Seige Troisdorf, GermanyLegacy Ladies Calabasas, CALekorice, o.s. Prague, Czech RepublicLend A Hand Foundation of Northern California Oakland, CALewis University Romeoville, ILLibera Associazione Genitori Vignate, ItalyLifeCare Alliance Columbus, OHLift for Life St. Louis, MOLincoln Foundation Louisville, KYLINK Unlimited Scholars Chicago, ILLoaves & Fishes of the Rio Grande Valley Harlingen, TXLOL Foundation Cheshire, United KingdomLondon Wildlife Trust London, United KingdomLong Beach Police Foundation Long Beach, CALouisville Metro Parks Foundation Louisville, KYLouisville Metro Police Foundation Louisville, KYLouisville Olmsted Parks Conservancy Louisville, KYLouisville Youth Group Louisville, KYLouisville Zoo Foundation Louisville, KYMagic Bus India Foundation Mumbai, India

Maison Chance Ho Chi Minh City, VietnamMama’s Kitchen San Diego, CAMarcus Autism Institute Atlanta, GAMarine Toys for Tots Foundation Triangle, VAMary Hall Freedom House Sandy Springs, GAMater Dei, Sr. Carmelina’s Home for Women Toronto, CanadaMeals on Wheels of Tarrant County Fort Worth, TXMecosta County Senior Center Board of Directors Mecosta, MIMedShare International Decatur, GAMegan’s Wings Upland, CAMessage of Hope Foundation West Wareham, MAMetta Welfare Association Singapore, SingaporeMillennium Momentum Foundation Los Angeles, CAMiracle Corners of the World New York, NYMonadnock Family Services Keene, NHMorehouse College Atlanta, GAMorehouse School of Medicine Atlanta, GAMore-Self-Less Corporation Grand Rapids, MIMPI De Kindervriend Rollegem, BelgiumMulticultural Educational Programs Des Moines, IAMusical Arts Institute Chicago, ILMykasih Foundation Petaling Jaya, MalaysiaNAAAHR-South Florida Chapter Coral Springs, FLNancy K. Perry Childrens Shelter West Columbia, SCNational Action Council for Minorities in Engineering White Plains, NYNational Arbor Day Foundation Loln, NENational Association for the Advancement of Colored People Baltimore, MDNational Association of Student Employment Administrators Richardson, TXNational Association to Protect Children Knoxville, TNNational Badge of Honor Memorial Foundation Dallas, TXNational Black Arts Festival Atlanta, GANational Black Child Development Institute Washington, D.C.National Black MBA Association Atlanta, GANational Center for American Indian Enterprise Development Mesa, AZNational Congress of American Indians Washington, D.C.National Council for Science and the Environment Washington, D.C.National Council of La Raza Washington, D.C.National Council of the United States Society of St. Vincent de Paul Minneapolis, MNNational Diversity Council Houston, TXNational Fallen Firefighters Foundation Emmitsburg, MDNational Federation of the Blind Baltimore, MDNational Foreign Trade Council Foundation Washington, D.C.National Foundation for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Atlanta, GANational Hispana Leadership Institute Fair Lawn, NJNational Merit Scholarship Corporation Evanston, ILNational Minority Supplier Development Council Business Consortium New York, NYNational Organization on Disability New York, NYNational Park Foundation Washington, D.C.National Safety Council Itasca, ILNational Safety Council Omaha, NENational Society of High School Scholars Atlanta, GANational Urban Fellows New York, NYNational Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster Alexandria, VA

National Youth Leadership Council Saint Paul, MNNature Conservancy Atlanta, GANear Southside Employment Coalition St. Louis, MONeighborhood House Louisville, KYNeighborhood House Association Salt Lake City, UTNetwork for Teaching Entrepreneurship Baltimore, MDNetwork of Employers for Traffic Safety Vienna, VANew City Kids Jersey City, NJNew Directions Housing Corporation Louisville, KYNew Leash On Life USA Penn Valley, PANew Life Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association Sham Shui Po, Hong KongNew Resolution India Mumbai, IndiaNew York - New Jersey Trail Conference Mahwah, NJNew York Foundling New York, NYNick Lowery Youth Foundation Scottsdale, AZNo Limits Theater Group Culver City, CANorth Carolina Independent Colleges & Universities Raleigh, NCNorth Coast Stand Down Eureka, CANorth Dallas Shared Ministries Dallas, TXNorthwestern University Evanston, ILOasis D’Amour Decines, FranceOdd Squad Productions Society Vancouver, CanadaOlcott Beach Carousel Park Association Olcott, NYOldham County Educational Foundation Crestwood, KYOnBoard Atlanta, GAOne Church One Child of Illinois Evergreen Park, ILOpen Academy Los Angeles, CAOpen Meadow Alternative Schools Portland, OROperation American Soldier Watertown, MAOperation Blessing International Virginia Beach, VAOperation Hope International Los Angeles, CAOperation Smile Philippines Makati City, PhilippinesOperation Smile Thailand Bangkok, ThailandOpportunity International Oak Brook, ILOrchard Place Des Moines, IAOregon Food Bank Portland, OROrganization for Tropical Studies San Jose, Costa RicaOrganization of Black Aerospace Professionals Westchester, ILOrganization of Chinese Americans Washington, D.C.Oslo Red Cross Oslo, NorwayOur House Little Rock, ARPace Center for Girls, Palm Beach County West Palm Beach, FLPACER Center Minneapolis, MNPalisades Emergency Residence Corporation Union City, NJPalmetto Health Foundation Columbia, SCParalyzed Veterans of America Washington, D.C.Parents of Murdered Children - Delaware County Chapter Norwood, PAParents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays Washington, D.C.Partnership for Nonprofit Excellence Richmond, VAPasadena Child Development Associates Pasadena, CAPassaic County Elks Cerebral Palsy Treatment Center Clifton, NJPeace Corps Washington, D.C.Peaceful Waters Services Edgewood, MDPENCIL Foundation Nashville, TN

People Working Cooperatively of the Midwest Cinnati, OHPeregrine Corporation - STRIVE South Portland, MEPeterson Institute for International Economics Washington, D.C.Phoenix Rescue Mission Phoenix, AZPiedmont Park Conservancy Atlanta, GAPlayworks Education Energized Newark, NJPoints of Light Foundation Atlanta, GAPolice Athletic League of Philadelphia Philadelphia, PAPolish-Ukrainian Cooperation Foundation PAUCI Warsaw, PolandPolski Zwiazek Niewidomych Okreg Dolnoslaski Wroclaw, PolandPolskie Towarzystwo Opieki Paliatywnej Oddzial w Poznaniu Poznan, PolandPro Bono Partnership of Atlanta Atlanta, GAProject COPE St. Louis, MOProject Future Atlanta, GAProject GRAD Atlanta, GAProject One Louisville, KYProject Open Hand San Francisco, CAPromises2Kids Foundation San Diego, CAProtestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America Ogden, UTPublic Foundation Shugyla Almaty, KazakhstanR. Fathers M.A.D. Huntsville, ALR. N. Fickett Elementary School Atlanta, GARainbow Village Duluth, GARazem dla Nikiszowca Katowice, PolandReading and Education for Adult Development Richmond, VARebuilding Together Greater Harrisburg Harrisburg, PARebuilding Together Miami-Dade Miami, FLRebuilding Together Portland Portland, ORRegents of The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MIRenewal House Nashville, TNRichmond Public Schools Education Foundation Richmond, VARocky Mountain Chapter FBI National Academy Assoc. Denver, CORonald McDonald House of Baltimore Baltimore, MDRonald Mcdonald House of Central Illinois Springfield, ILRonald McDonald House of Omaha Omaha, NERonald McDonald House of Richmond Richmond, VARonald McDonald House of Southern New Jersey Camden, NJRonald McDonald House of the Upper Midwest Minneapolis, MNRotary International District 5510 Foundation Gilbert, AZRotary Youth Camp Tallahassee, FLRoyal National Institute of Blind People London, United KingdomSachi Koto Communications Jasper, GASafe America Foundation Marietta, GASafehaven of Tarrant County Hurst, TXSaint Florian Center Indianapolis, IN Saint Louis Crisis Nursery St. Louis, MOSalem State University Foundation Salem, MASan Francisco Parks Alliance San Francisco, CASan Francisco SafeHouse San Francisco, CASCARC Foundation Augusta, NJScholarship America St. Peter, MNSCORE Foundation Herndon, VASecond Helpings Indianapolis, INSelf-Help for The Elderly San Francisco, CA

2014 Foundation Funding Recipients 2014 Foundation Funding RecipientsORGANIZATION LOCATION ORGANIZATION LOCATIONORGANIZATION LOCATION ORGANIZATION LOCATION

5958

Senior Connections, The Capital Area Agency on Aging Richmond, VASenior Services North Fulton Alpharetta, GAService Over Self Memphis, TNSeton Home San Antonio, TXShanghai Hand in Hand Life Care Developing Center Shanghai, ChinaShanghai Oasis Ecological Conservation and Communication Center Shanghai, ChinaShenzhen Aviation Transportation Volunteer Club Shenzhen, ChinaShoes and Clothes for Kids Cleveland, OHSia Yorker Brain Awareness Scholarship Foundation Deltona, FLSIDART Jaipur, IndiaSimmons College of Kentucky Louisville, KYSoaring Eagle Academy Burr Ridge, ILSORBA Woodstock Woodstock, GASOS Children’s Villages Athens, GreeceSOS Children’s Villages Budapest, HungarySouth China University of Technology Education Guangzhou, China Development FoundationSouth Park Inn Hartford, CTSouthside Child Development Center Richmond, VASouthwest Indian Foundation Gallup, NMSpecial Dreams Farm St. Clair Township, MISpecial Leisure Services Foundation Rolling Meadows, ILSpecial Needs Network Los Angeles, CASpecial Olympics 2015 World Summer Games Los Angeles, CASpecial Olympics Arizona Phoenix, AZSpecial Olympics Florida Miami, FLSpecial Olympics Georgia Atlanta, GASpecial Olympics Illinois Normal, ILSpecial Olympics Kentucky Frankfort, KYSpecial Olympics Malaysia Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaSpecial Olympics Maryland Baltimore, MDSpecial Olympics Minnesota Minneapolis, MNSpecial Olympics New Mexico Albuquerque, NMSpecial Olympics Southern California Long Beach, CASpecial Olympics Texas Austin, TXSpecial Olympics Virginia Richmond, VASpelman College Atlanta, GASpina Bifida Association of Kentucky Louisville, KYSpringHaven Elizabethtown, KYSt. Bernard Project Chalmette, LASt. Charles Community College Foundation Cottleville, MOSt. Charles County Paramedic Assoc. Community Outreach St. Peters, MO St. John Council for Ontario Toronto, Canada St. Joseph Home for the Aged Louisville, KY St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital Memphis, TN St. Jude’s Ranch for Children Boulder City, NV St. Nicks Alliance Brooklyn, NY St. Vincent de Paul of Baltimore Baltimore, MD STEMaction Glenwood, MD Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation Staten Island, NYStiftelsen Skane Stadsmission Malmo, Sweden Stowarzyszenie Laboratorium Troski Krakow, Poland Stowarzyszenie Mostek Zabki, Poland

Stowarzyszenie Pomocy Dzieciom “Przytul Mnie” Lodz, Poland STRIDE Adaptive Sports Rensselaer, NY Strive for College Milpitas, CA Student Conservation Association Arlington, VASuccess For Autism Wickliffe, OHSunshine Social Welfare Foundation Taipei City, TaiwanSupreme Court Historical Society Washington, D.C.Surf Life Saving Sydney Little Bay, AustraliaSusan G. Komen Italia Rome, ItalySustainable Atlanta Atlanta, GATaproot Foundation - Chicago Chicago, ILTaylor & Taylor Family Resource Center Nashville, TNTDI: Turning Dreams Into Realities Houston, TXTeamsters Local No. 25 Boston, MATEARS Foundation Sandton, South AfricaTERI Oceanside, CATexas Diversity Council Houston, TXThe Abbeyfield Society Hertfordshire, United KingdomThe Backstoppers St. Louis, MOThe Beautiful Store Seoul, South KoreaThe Cedarbrook Society Milton Ontario, CanadaThe Cochlear Implant Foundation of New Zealand Greenlane, New ZealandThe College of St. Scholastica Duluth, MNThe Duffy House Burke, VAThe Esplanade Singapore, SingaporeThe Father’s Heart Ministries Queens Village, NYThe Hispanic Alliance Greenville, SCThe Hispanic Heritage Center of Texas San Antonio, TXThe Howard Phillips Center for Children & Families Orlando, FLThe Links - North Broward County Chapter Sunrise, FLThe Methodist Home Macon, GAThe Myton Hospices Warwick, United KingdomThe National Action Network New York, NYThe Neighbourhood Advice-Action Council Hong Kong, Hong KongThe Potter’s Wheel Evansville, INThe Salvation Army - Charlotte Charlotte, NCThe Salvation Army - Metro Atlanta Norcross, GAThe Salvation Army - Midland Saint Louis, MOThe Salvation Army - Milwaukee County Wauwatosa, WIThe Salvation Army World Service Office Alexandria, VAThe School for Ethics and Global Leadership Washington, D.C.The Springboard Project Horsham, United KingdomThe Susie Reizod Foundation New Paltz, NYThe Twenty Pearls Foundation East Point, GAThe Viscardi Center Albertson, NYThe William Paterson University of New Jersey Foundation Wayne, NJTiger Woods Foundation Irvine, CATigermountain Foundation Phoenix, AZToday Foundation Dallas, TXTokutei Hieiri Katsudou Houjin Nihon No Take Fan Kurabu Yokohama, JapanToolBank USA - Atlanta Atlanta, GAToolBank USA - Chicago Chicago, ILToolBank USA - Cincinnati Cinnati, OH

2014 Foundation Funding Recipients 2014 Foundation Funding Recipients

ToolBank USA - Richmond Richmond, VATowarzystwo Przyjaciot Domu Dziecka nr 3 w Toruniu Torun, PolandTrails4All Paramount, CATransportation Energy Partners Atlanta, GATrees Atlanta Atlanta, GATrisomie 21 Ille et Vilaine Saint-Gregoire, FranceTroy Area United Ministries Troy, NYTuloy Foundation Muntinlupa, PhilippinesTurkish Kidney Foundation Istanbul, TurkeyUK Youth Canary Wharf, United KingdomUnited Communities Against Poverty Capitol Heights, MDUnited Negro College Fund Fairfax, VAUnited States Association for UNHCR Washington, D.C.United States Capitol Historical Society Washington, D.C.United States Chamber of Commerce Foundation Washington, D.C.United States Fund for UNICEF New York, NYUnited States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Foundation Washington, D.C.United States Hispanic Leadership Institute Chicago, ILUnited States Pan Asian American Chamber of Commerce Washington, D.C.United Way of Broward County Fort Lauderdale, FLUnited Way of Greater Atlanta Atlanta, GAUnited Way of Greater Los Angeles Los Angeles, CAUnited Way of Greater Milwaukee Milwaukee, WIUnited Way of Greater Twin Cities Minneapolis, MNUnited Way of King County Seattle, WAUnited Way of Metropolitan Chicago Chicago, ILUnited Way of Northern New Jersey Cedar Knolls, NJUnited Way of Snohomish County Everett, WAUnited Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PAUnited Way of the Bay Area San Francisco, CAUnited Way of the Capital Region Enola, PAUnited Way of Tri-County Framingham, MAUnited Way of Valley of the Sun Phoenix, AZUnited Way of Waukesha County Waukesha, WIUnited Way Worldwide Alexandria, VAUniversiis Societa Cooperativa Sociale Udine, ItalyUniversity of Georgia Foundation Athens, GAUniversity of Washington Foundation Seattle, WAUrban League New York, NYUrban League of Broward County Fort Lauderdale, FLUrban League of Central Florida Orlando, FLUrban League of Columbia Columbia, SCUrban League of Greater Atlanta Atlanta, GAUrban League of Greater Cleveland Cleveland, OHUrban League of Greater Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, PAUrban League of Houston Houston, TXUrban League of Kansas City Kansas City, MOUrban League of Knoxville Knoxville, TNUrban League of Las Vegas-Clark County Las Vegas, NVUrban League of Los Angeles Los Angeles, CAUrban League of Louisville Louisville, KYUrban League of Metropolitan Seattle Seattle, WAUrban League of Metropolitan St. Louis St. Louis, MO Urban League of Middle Tennessee Nashville, TN

Urban League of Philadelphia Philadelphia, PAUrban League of Pinellas County St. Petersburg, FLUrban League of Portland Portland, ORUsher’s New Look Duluth, GAValley Community Association Buffalo, NYVerbalEyze Atlanta, GAVerein zur Förderung und Betreuung spastisch gelähmter Troisdorf, Germany Kinder V.a. KörperbehinderterVereinigte Stifung fur Koperbehindertenfursorge in Unterfranken Wurzburg, GermanyVeterans Memorial Park of Kentucky Pewee Valley, KYVictory Boxing Club Omaha, NEVietnam Rural Industries Research and Development Institute Hanoi City, VietnamVilla Indigo Brussels, BelgiumVinaCapital Foundation Ho Chi Minh City, VietnamVirginia Tech Foundation Blacksburg, VAVista Maria Dearborn Heights, MIVolunteers of America Kentucky Louisville, KYWALK Dublin, IrelandWestminster Rescue Mission Westminster, MDWhen You Wish Upon A Star Nottingham, United KingdomWHYY Philadelphia, PAWilderness Trace Child Development Center Danville, KYWomen in Aviation, International West Alexandria, OHWomen of Wisdom Rural Hall, NCWomen’s Center of Montgomery County Elkins Park, PAWomen’s International Holistic Council Fort Lauderdale, FL Woodruff Arts Center Atlanta, GAWorld Business Council for Sustainable Development Chene-Bougeries, SwitzerlandWorld Food Program USA Washington, D.C. World Resources Institute Washington, D.C. World Wildlife Fund Washington, D.C. Wounded EOD Warrior Foundation Bluemont, VA Wyoming Congressional Award Council Encampment, WY Yayasan Balita Sehat South Jakarta, Indonesia YMCA of Greater Richmond Richmond, VA YMCA of Haiti Port au Pre, Haiti YMCA of Metropolitan Atlanta Atlanta, GA Young Adult Development In Action Louisville, KY Young Americans Center for Financial Education Denver, CO

Young Women’s Leadership Charter School Chicago, IL

Youth Emergency Services & Shelter of Iowa Des Moines, IA

Youth Federation for World Peace - Thailand Bangkok, Thailand

Youth In Need St. Charles, MO

Youth Without Shelter Etobicoke, Canada

Yunus Creative Lab Atlanta, GA

YWCA Vancouver, Canada

Zoo Atlanta Atlanta, GA

ORGANIZATION LOCATION ORGANIZATION LOCATION

ORGANIZATION LOCATION ORGANIZATION LOCATION

6160

To learn more about The UPS Foundation, visit ups.com/foundation

The UPS Foundation seeks to support organizations that are in alignment with our focus areas, guidelines, and non-discrimination policy. UPS and The UPS Foundation do not discriminate against any person or organization with regard to categories protected by applicable law,

as well as other categories protected by UPS and The UPS Foundation in our own policies. These include, but are not limited to race, gender, national origin, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, veteran or military status, pregnancy, age and religion.

The UPS Foundation is a separate legal entity from UPS with tax-exempt status under section 501(c)(3) of the IRS tax code. Funding for The UPS Foundation is provided by annual contributions from the company’s profits.

2014 Trustees & Staff

Eduardo MartinezPresident

Frank RomeoVice President

Jerald BarnesDirector, Employee Engagement

Lisa LynnDirector, Corporate Relations

Joe RuizDirector, Humanitarian Relief & Resilience Program

Laura JohnsOperations Manager

Noy LounnarathLocal Grants Manager

La’Kerri JacksonCorporate Relations Supervisor

Alice TurnerHumanitarian Relief & Resilience Program Specialist

Ruby CunninghamDomestic Local Grants Administrator

Tiffany FindlayUnited Way Campaign Administrator

Bardie HooksCorporate Grants & Operations Administrator

Kenya MyersCorporate Relations Administrator

Noora SaloomInternational Local Grants Administrator

Katherine DenmanFellow

Board of TrusteesJohn McDevittChair David AbneySecretary Kurt KuehnTreasurer Dan BruttoTrustee

D. Scott DavisTrustee

Alan GershenhornTrustee Teri McClureTrustee

2014 Foundation Staff

© 2015 United Parcel Service of America, Inc. UPS, the UPS logo and the color brown are trademarks of United Parcel Service of America, Inc. All rights reserved.