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October 2009 |
LEE MARINE SUPPORTS PHUKET
CHARITY FOUNDATION
PCF RACE DAY - 7th November 2009 Canal
Villiage, Laguna Phuket
Buy a DUCK for the Big
Race for a chance to win a great prize. Go to www.phuketcharity.org/duck
Buy a CROWNLINE and Lee Marine will
donate THB 100,000 on your behalf.
Come along to the PCF Race Day
at Canal Village, Laguna on November 7th, for
a fun day of water, and shore based activities to raise
money for Phuket charities. Lee Marine will be there
with a Crownline 220LS on display for people to see, and
will have information on hand about the Crownline range.
For any visitors who register
their interest and order a new Crownline within 7 days
of the event, Lee Marine will contribute THB 100,000 to
the Phuket Community Foundation, giving a welcome boost
to the proceeds of the day.
Come along to watch the races
and join in the fun. Buy a boat for the high season and
join us in helping PCF fund some very worthwhile and
notable projects in Phuket.
About The
Phuket Community Foundation
(PCF)
Community Foundations (CFs) are
a powerful force for doing good in society. They are
also financial powerhouses. For example, Rotary has
total worldwide assets – that is, investments from which
Rotary clubs draw an income – of around US$700 million.
In contrast, the Tulsa Community Foundation alone has
assets of US$3.l7 billion, and the top 10 in the US have
assets totaling around US$18 billion.
Yet in Thailand, few have heard
of CFs or know how they work. CFs are different from
conventional charities. In the conventional model,
donors give to the charity whose agenda is closest to
their heart, and the members of the charity then apply
the funds to that agenda.
There are several charities in
Phuket that already do very valuable work, such as
helping stray animals, assisting with children’s
education, housing orphans and underprivileged children
and preserving culture.
Their contribution can never be
overvalued. But there are huge gaps, huge needs, that
are not addressed by charities, or by national or local
government. It is these needs that the PCF was set up to
address.
The foundation has a sweeping
remit. Its stated mission is “To help maintain or
improve the quality of life in Phuket for everyone –
regardless of their origins, their beliefs, or their
social or financial status – with particular emphasis on
poverty alleviation; preserving the environment;
education (of both children and adults); promoting art
and culture; preserving the island’s architectural and
historical heritage; improving public safety; and
boosting public health.”
How on earth is the PCF going to
do all of this? It isn’t. To use an analogy, the PCF is
to charitable or community work what a bank is to
industry. Banks make nothing.
They do not own factories, hire
workers or turn steel into cars. What they do instead is
support these activities through funding, through expert
advice and by providing transparency.
In much the same way, the PCF,
of which the Phuket Gazette is a founding sponsor, was
established to support community organizations and
charities (including those already mentioned) by helping
to source funds, by providing expert advice or
volunteers and by giving social projects the
transparency that is otherwise often
lacking.
The PCF does, in fact, have a
couple of projects of its own. Although we believe these
are valuable to society in general, they are also
designed to act as a “shop window”, to demonstrate what
can happen when a variety of elements of society can be
drawn together to achieve an aim.
The first of these projects is
the Motorcycle Back Light Project. Anyone who has driven
on a dark road at night will know the heart-stopping
experience of having a motorcycle with no rear light
appear right in front. Rear-light bulbs cost just 20
baht, yet a straw poll suggests that as many as one in
four of all motorbikes on Phuket don’t have a working
rear light.
The PCF has drawn a variety of
people and organizations together to address this
problem. Motorcycle dealers donated bulbs, the
Kusondharm Foundation lent a tent and chairs are
borrowed from a nearby temple. Students from the
Vocational College give up a couple of days of their
free time to change bulbs. The PCF designed and made
posters, which bike owners can read while their bulbs
are changed, explaining why a rear light can save the
rider’s life. The total cost to the PCF of the first
session, during which we made 150 motorbikes safer, was
about 7,000 baht.
Our other current project is to
establish toy libraries in different parts of the
island. Toys are an important element in developing
children’s imaginations and, when with other children,
their social skills. Yet many families on the island
simply cannot afford them. One toy library, from which
children will be able to borrow toys to take home, has
already opened at Wat Thepnimit on Chao Fa East Road and
another at Hongyok Bamrung School in Mai Khao. We have
earmarked two other schools for action.
Again, the libraries are a
demonstration of what can be achieved when different
people are brought together. At Hongyok Bamrung School,
Bt200,000 was given by the Phuket Direct Fund
Association of Zurich to pay for toys and furniture to
store them in. Bamrung Sampaorat, Chairman of the
Islamic Committee of Phuket, paid from his own pocket
for the painting of the room, which was done in a single
morning by sailors and marines from the USS Boxer
(organized by Brad Kenny of the Patong Rotary).
Additional toys came from private donors, including
primary students at the British International School.
The library will be run by the school itself. At the
opening, the Phuket International Hospital gave free
health check-ups, and put on a puppet show.
As can be seen, the PCF is
capable of pulling together a variety of good-hearted
people to complete a project. But there must be
thousands of ideas for projects out there. We can offer
help and advice, and ensure financial transparency, but
we can’t manage them all.
This is why we are now compiling
a database of people who have ideas and are willing to
put in the time to make them happen; potential donors
(in cash or kind); experts willing to give free advice;
and volunteers who want to spend time doing something
worthwhile.
If you fit into any of these
categories, we would very much like to hear from you.
You can contact me by email at alasdair@phuketcharity.org or,
if you prefer to write in Thai, email Roongprakai
Sang-in at manager@phuketcharity.org. The
PCF website – which has just undergone a thorough revamp
– is at http://www.phuketcharity.org/.
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