(CNN) — Efren Peñaflorida, who started a “pushcart classroom” in the Philippines to provide an alternative to gang membership and bring education to poor children who are scavenging in landfills, has been named the 2009 CNN Hero of the Year.
CNN’s Anderson Cooper unveiled Peñaflorida as the winner of the most online votes at the conclusion of the third-annual “CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute” at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood on Saturday night.
The gala event, taped before an audience of 3,000, will air on Thanksgiving, November 26, at 9 p.m. ET/PT on the global networks of CNN.
Peñaflorida, who will receive $100,000 to continue his work with the Dynamic Teen Company, was selected after seven weeks of online voting at CNN.com. More than 2.75 million votes were cast.
“Our planet is filled with heroes, young and old, rich and poor, man, woman of different colors, shapes and sizes. We are one great tapestry,” Peñaflorida said upon accepting the honor. “Each person has a hidden hero within, you just have to look inside you and search it in your heart, and be the hero to the next one in need.
“So to each and every person inside this theater and for those who are watching at home, the hero in you is waiting to be unleashed. Serve, serve well, serve others above yourself and be happy to serve. As I always tell to my co-volunteers … you are the change that you dream, as I am the change that I dream, and collectively we are the change that this world needs to be.”
The top 10 CNN Heroes, chosen by a blue-ribbon panel from an initial pool of more than 9,000 viewer nominations, were each honored with a documentary tribute and introduced by a celebrity presenter. Each of the top 10 Heroes receives $25,000.
“With the recognition they receive on our stage,” said Cooper, who hosted the tribute, “they’ll be able to help thousands and thousands of people. Through their efforts, lives will be changed and lives will be saved.”
Watch Efren’s moving story from CNN, featured on the Good News Network during the voting period, and watch the Gala winner’s speech below. And, watch the entire award ceremony on CNN, featuring all the Hero stories, tomorrow night after your Thanksgiving dinner.
(CNN) — Efren Peñaflorida, who started a “pushcart classroom” in the Philippines to provide an alternative to gang membership and bring education to poor children who are scavenging in landfills, has been named the 2009 CNN Hero of the Year.
CNN’s Anderson Cooper unveiled Peñaflorida as the winner of the most online votes at the conclusion of the third-annual “CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute” at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood on Saturday night.
The gala event, taped before an audience of 3,000, will air on Thanksgiving, November 26, at 9 p.m. ET/PT on the global networks of CNN.
Peñaflorida, who will receive $100,000 to continue his work with the Dynamic Teen Company, was selected after seven weeks of online voting at CNN.com. More than 2.75 million votes were cast.
“Our planet is filled with heroes, young and old, rich and poor, man, woman of different colors, shapes and sizes. We are one great tapestry,” Peñaflorida said upon accepting the honor. “Each person has a hidden hero within, you just have to look inside you and search it in your heart, and be the hero to the next one in need.
Abe Pollin, philanthropist, developer, and the face of Washington D.C. sports, as the longest-tenured owner of any NBA team, has died at the age of 85.
“He arrived in Washington, D.C. more than 75 years ago, with his poor Russian father, speaking no English. Through decades of hard work and a seemingly unstoppable will, Abe Pollin rose to the top of the worlds of business, philanthropy and professional sports. In the process, he transformed his adopted home town by bringing professional basketball and hockey franchises here and spending $220 million to build a massive sports and entertainment arena that has dramatically improved the face of downtown Washington.” – from Washington Post’s Marc Fisher.
Mayor Fenty said in a statement, “Today the District of Columbia has lost one of our greatest treasures. Abe Pollin almost single-handedly revitalized the Gallery Place / Chinatown neighborhood by turning down offers from suburban jurisdictions and finance and build the Verizon Center on 7th Street NW.”
East Harlem restaurant owner Kevin Walters is not only known for his business savvy, he has a deep appreciation for and commitment to the community, which, like much of America, is struggling in these hard times. The Owner of CREOLE Restaurant is leading the East Harlem Cares coalition in feeding the community once again by hosting a Thanksgiving banquet for the areas neediest residents free of charge.
Walters subscribes to the African adage, “If you want to go somewhere fast, go alone, but if you want to go far take others with you”, so for a second year in a row, he has assembled fellow business owners and non-profit community leaders to join with Creole in hosting the free Thanksgiving Eve event today.
The event will be more than just a dinner to feed those experiencing hardships. There will be entertainment and special guests. Local politicians and even sport stars are joining the effort. Former New York Knickerbocker Earl “The Pearl” Monroe will serve families and participate in making this event a memorable one. “We believe we have an obligation to help our community hold on to the traditions that we have come to love.” said Walters.
The dinner is being held at Holy Rosary Church with attendance expected to be at least 500 people. With more restaurants involved this year, including Ricardo’s, the group is ready to feed as many people as end up assembling at their doorstep.
The church is located at 428 E. 119th Street in East Harlem, with the event running from noon to 5:00.
Photos for the Good News Network, from Angela Hollis
For over a quarter century, the Body Shop has built a reputation for integrity and social responsibility. The world’s second largest cosmetic franchise continued its elevation of corporate values this year with the release of its “2009 Living Our Values report”.
The annual report outlines Body Shop values and how they are put into practice. Its 5 core values support:
No Animal Testing
Only Trading with suppliers who are committed to their Code of Conduct for Suppliers
Activating Self Esteem
Defending Human Rights
Protecting the Planet
To care for the planet, the Body Shop became the first cosmetics company to source sustainably harvested palm oil and introduce the ingredient into the beauty industry, working in partnership with a certified organic producer in Colombia, in 2007.
Do you ever wonder where it came from, this tendency to argue for your limitations? We talk ourselves out of trying something new because we assume it won’t turn out well.
Personally, I don’t have a clue about when my habit started, but the cool thing is, I have begun to turn it around.
I’m beginning with me, but have started a quest to help more people to believe in the limitlessness of their own abilities. For me, the goal is to do this without motivation or willpower. This is not about mind over matter this is about changing a belief.
If you think you can do a thing, or think you can’t do a thing, you’re right. ~ Henry Ford
This is about being conscious whenever I enter a new situation and immediately begin talking myself out of it. It sounds something like this: “I’m not good at those types of things,” “I can’t do that,” “that won’t work,” “that’s too difficult,” or “it will never happen.”
Do you ever wonder where it came from, this tendency to argue for your limitations? We talk ourselves out of trying something new because we assume it won’t turn out well.
Personally, I don’t have a clue about when my habit started, but the cool thing is, I have begun to turn it around.
I’m beginning with me, but have started a quest to help more people to believe in the limitlessness of their own abilities. For me, the goal is to do this without motivation or willpower. This is not about mind over matter this is about changing a belief.
If you think you can do a thing, or think you can’t do a thing, you’re right. ~ Henry Ford
This is about being conscious whenever I enter a new situation and immediately begin talking myself out of it. It sounds something like this: “I’m not good at those types of things,” “I can’t do that,” “that won’t work,” “that’s too difficult,” or “it will never happen.”
Kim Yacobucci no longer has to turn the car ignition on a weekly basis and “pray” that she will be able to go pick up her son at the Tilton living facility that helps treat him for his neurological impairments.
On Monday the single mother from Portsmouth remained in disbelief as she cruised down Route 101 in a 2008 Chevy Impala that was given to her through Good News Garage and was donated by NASCAR team owner Rick Hendrick.
For the first time in its 40 year history of charitable giving, Tom’s of Maine, the natural toothpaste company, opened up its funding process to the public, letting them vote on who will get $100,000 in grants.
In their “50 States for Good” campaign 2,000 organizations from around the US submitted applications to be considered for voting. The editor of the Good News Network was one of five judges who initially whittled the list to 50 finalists.
After weeks of voting and 280,000 online ballots collected, five community projects were chosen to each receive $20,000 for creating lasting positive change in their communities. The five winning projects, announced yesterday, have plans for helping abandoned animals, gleaning fresh vegetables from fields for food pantries, giving disabled folks a ramp-up, helping a school avoid flooding while teaching conservation, and creating a community garden to help low-income families.
The Corridor of Cruelty & Neglect, Houston Mobile Clinic, Houston – The money will be used to help an area of Houston dubbed the “Corridor of Cruelty & Neglect”, where animals are often abandoned, injured or ill. A mobile clinic will work with animal rescue to get animals to the clinic for health care and sterilization, with the aim of finding homes for them.
Project Access, Rutherford Housing Partnership, Rutherfordton, N.C. – Project Access is a ramp-building project to provide handicap access to 15 to 20 low-income homeowners in the county who cannot now safely access their homes.
Free Fresh Produce: Gleaning for DC’s Poor, Bread for the City, Washington, D.C. – The money will support weekly trips that send volunteers into fields of regional farms, where they’ll collect tons of fresh produce that would otherwise go to waste. A couple hours of labor from a couple dozen volunteers can yield free produce that will feed a couple thousand families for a week.
Butterflies and Boulders: A School Greening Project, Coeur d’Alene Elementary School, Venice, Calif. – The money will be used to remove 8,000 square feet of asphalt, and replace it with drought tolerant plants that allow rain to percolate into the soil rather than flood the school. This special garden and its integrated curriculum will teach lasting lessons of conservation and promote awareness of the local watersheds.
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative, Wilmington, Ohio – The money will create a community garden for low-income families, grow produce for area food banks and coordinate grower co-ops and farmers’ markets to increase fresh food access for low-income families.
Tom’s of Maine has a lengthy history of supporting critical issues such as clean waterways and greater access to quality, affordable dental care. This year the company left the decision to the public to decide what projects should receive the company’s financial support: “Our five winners are excellent examples of organizations all over the country that are having a lasting, positive impact in our communities every day.”
After saving money for a year to buy an engagement ring for his planned hot-air balloon marriage proposal, James Ng watched as his diamond plummetted 500 feet into the forest below.
He proposed marriage to his beloved anyway, and after touching ground again, set about to find the ring. Luckily, the 26 year-old pastor had hidden the 1-carat diamond ring in his camera case, so it was easier to find.
He used Google maps to plot the flight path and marked off search grids. On the seventh day, he rested.
(Update: November 24, 2009) Our website is secure once again, after Friday’s hacking incident. We are updating the Forum, where the infiltration occurred, and it should be ready with new software in a day or two. The old forum posts will be imported into the new Forum! Thanks to the dozens of readers who alerted me to the attack. Original notice continues below:
As many of you have noticed, thanks to a Google firewall setup to warn people about malicious code on the Good News Network, the site was hacked for the first time in 13 years.
I finally got some help on this today (Sunday) and an old friend was able to disable the Forum where he found the malware code.
He is a very smart developer and he said that the site is secure now.
The Google warning is still up, I’ve been trying to jump through the hoops they set up to restore the site to good graces, but it’s slow moving.
I just wanted to post something about this ON the site (not very visible I’m afraid, as it is in the Editor’s Blog, at the bottom of the front page, but I’m doing the best I can here.
How this code affected me was, it tried to download a file to my computer, and since I had no idea what it was, I simply clicked CANCEL about three times when the pop-up window asked for access. So I hope the only way anyone could have been affected by this was to Download the malicious file coming from either go-lawschool.com/, or darkblog.org/.
That’s all for now. I will add some news stories while I wait for my webmaster to get my urgent emails screaming for help with the Google warning page and Forum problem… (We only communicate virtually so cannot call him.)
The director of the Rainier Valley Food Bank says he’s overwhelmed by the donations that have poured in since locals learned that $2,000 worth of donated food was stolen on Seattle area location on Wednesday.
“It’s a record — by far,” Osborne said. “Everything from $10,000 from Walmart to two very young kids coming down this morning with their mother and the contents of their piggy bank after they heard about it on the radio.”
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation on Thursday announced its biggest education donation in a decade, $290 million, in support of three school districts and five charter groups working to transform how teachers are evaluated and how they get tenure.
A separate $45 million research initiative will study 3,700 classroom teachers in six cities, including New York, seeking to answer the question that has puzzled investigators for decades: What, exactly, makes a good teacher effective?
The Tech Awards is an international program honoring innovators from around the world who are applying technology to benefit humanity. This year’s winners received their awards at a Gala yesterday in San Jose, CA.
The 2009 Tech Awards Laureates represent regions as diverse as Nigeria, Brazil, Great Britain, the United States and Bangladesh. And their work impacts people in many more countries worldwide.
15 innovators were honored for projects that address global issues on the environment, economic development, education, equality and health. A $50,000 cash prize was awarded to one Laureate in each category.
One Nigerian company with its Cows to Kilowatts program lowers pollution from the slaughterhouse, eliminates greenhouse gas emissions, while producing clean, cheap energy. The technology turns animal blood and waste into inexpensive, clean energy for consumers.
An innovation called Ultra Rice addresses the severe vitamin deficiency especially in women and children around the world with its product, which looks, cooks and tastes just like rice.
Watch the video below, and at the bottom read a description of the Laureates and their life-changing work.
The Tech Awards Laureates 2009:
Environment Award
Dr. Joseph Adelegan, Cows to Kilowatts (Nigeria): Slaughterhouse waste is one of the most significant sources of water pollution and greenhouse gas emissions in most developing economies. The anaerobic fixed film reactor used in the Cows to Kilowatts project (link opens in PDF) decontaminates the waste stream from slaughterhouses and turns this organic waste into methane that can be used to generate electricity or as inexpensive cooking gas.
GRUPEDSAC Eco-techniques Toolkits for Self-Sufficiency (Mexico): Poor quality of life in rural Mexico includes loss of soil fertility, lack of access to clean water, adequate shelter, nutrition, and health resources. Customizable Eco-techniques Toolkits for Self-Sufficiency combine old and new sustainable technologies — from cisterns to solar ovens — to fit the needs of each community.
Sean White, Electronic Field Guide (USA): Plant species are disappearing at an alarming rate; mobile identification and classification of plant species may aid in conservation and cataloguing. The Electronic Field Guide uses mobile-augmented photo identification of leaves based on virtual reality and situated visualization.
Biosciences Economic Development Award
Alternative Energy Development Corp., Alternative Energy for Empowerment (South Africa): Fuel cell use largely avoids the lead-acid waste of solar or wind installation batteries. Inexpensive, zinc-air fuel cells can be used in poor communities lacking access to grid power. Fuel cell waste can even be recycled as fertilizer.
Solar Ear (Botswana and Brazil): Standard Western hearing aids cost an average of $750, with battery costs typically $1 per week. Solar Ear, an inexpensive hearing aid suited to local conditions and manufactured by deaf workers who train one-another, costs $100 and is paired with a solar recharging unit for the batteries.
Driptech (India): Hundreds of millions of people in the developing world face water shortages in crop production; drip irrigation delivers precisely the right amount of water and not more. Driptech’s unique laser technology drills holes in one main line, thereby reducing the number of parts and the cost of a drip irrigation system.
Education Award
Akshaya Patra Foundation, School Meals Program (India): High quality, nutrient rich meals are key to the education process in poverty stricken areas. The School Meals Program uses integrated and adapted high-performance kitchen technology and food delivery systems to serve millions of Indian children a nutritious daily meal.
GeoGebra: Dynamic Mathematics for Everyone is a free, open-source software to display and practice geometry and mathematics that will help achieve rapid diffusion of information and quicker comprehension. GeoGebra created web-based, open-source software to visualize and practice geometric-based mathematics.
The Khan Academy: High school students around the world need informal, clear explanations that can be reviewed at a leisurely pace to supplement their formal learning. The Khan Academy created hundreds of free educational videos in math, statistics, physics, and finance using drawing software. The “blackboard” style videos are accessible via the internet and hosted on YouTube.
Equality Award
World of Good Development Organization (International): Handicraft workers around the world are generally paid per piece, often at low hourly rates. World of Good‘s Fair Wage Guide Software provides localized pricing evaluation of handmade goods to improve wages of informal workers. The free web-based platform encourages ethical trade by comparing wages worldwide.
Kiwanja.net: kiwanja.net’s FrontlineSMS allows for SMS technology to be used by hundreds of NGOs worldwide, for activities as diverse as election monitoring and dissemination of agricultural prices. This free software for non-governmental organizations deploys two-way SMS messaging and provides easy-to-use communications infrastructure for outreach in rural and urban areas.
Shidhulai Swanirvar Sangstha (Bangladesh): Providing mobile solar lighting can alleviate health problems due to smoke and CO2 emissions while establishing social enterprises. Retrofitting existing kerosene hurricane lanterns with CFL or LED lights can provide lighting for transient settlers in flood and hurricane-prone areas. SuryaHurricane also establishes women-oriented infrastructure for recharging lantern batteries using boats equipped with PV modules.
Health Award
mPedigree (Ghana): Counterfeit drugs are ubiquitous in the developing world; up to 80 percent of drugs in pharmacies are fakes with little or no active ingredients. Pharmaceutical manufacturers label packages with an alphanumeric code, which is later confirmed when consumers send free text queries in to the mPedigree database. This low-cost, instant method for reducing drug counterfeiting is expanding from Ghana to Nigeria, Rwanda, and India.
PATH, Ultra Rice: More than a billion people in developing nations suffer from dietary deficiencies in crucial micronutrients, including iron, zinc, folic acid, and vitamin A. Ultra Rice is an affordable, nutrient-fortified additive to standard rice, tailored to satisfy deficiencies common in the region where it is distributed.
Village Reach, Management Information System for Vaccine (Mozambique): Poor countries bear the greatest burden of infectious diseases, and have the least infrastructure for public health programs. Village Reach worked closely with the Mozambique Ministry of Health to implement supply chain logistics management systems, utilizing portable USB drives to automatically update and share information to improve the delivery of vaccines, drugs and critical medical supplies to rural clinics.
The Tech Awards is an international program honoring innovators from around the world who are applying technology to benefit humanity. This year’s winners received their awards at a Gala yesterday in San Jose, CA.
The 2009 Tech Awards Laureates represent regions as diverse as Nigeria, Brazil, Great Britain, the United States and Bangladesh. And their work impacts people in many more countries worldwide.
15 innovators were honored for projects that address global issues on the environment, economic development, education, equality and health. A $50,000 cash prize was awarded to one Laureate in each category.
One Nigerian company with its Cows to Kilowatts program lowers pollution from the slaughterhouse, eliminates greenhouse gas emissions, while producing clean, cheap energy. The technology turns animal blood and waste into inexpensive, clean energy for consumers.
An innovation called Ultra Rice addresses the severe vitamin deficiency especially in women and children around the world with its product, which looks, cooks and tastes just like rice.
Watch the video below, and at the bottom read a description of the Laureates and their life-changing work.
The “chocolate cure” for emotional stress is getting new support from a clinical trial published online in the Journal of Proteome Research. It found that eating about an ounce and a half of dark chocolate a day for two weeks reduced levels of stress hormones in the bodies of people feeling highly stressed. Everyone’s favorite treat also partially corrected other stress-related biochemical imbalances.
Beneficial substances in dark chocolate may also reduce risk factors for heart disease and other physical conditions, according to growing scientific evidence. Until now, however, there was little evidence from research in humans on exactly how chocolate might ease emotional stress.
In the study, scientists identified reductions in stress hormones and other stress-related biochemical changes in volunteers who rated themselves as highly stressed and ate dark chocolate for two weeks. “The study provides strong evidence that a daily consumption of 40 grams [1.4 ounces] during a period of 2 weeks is sufficient to modify the metabolism of healthy human volunteers,” the scientists say.
A plant that converts cow dung into energy for homes opened in the Netherlands last week.
Manure from cows at a nearby dairy farm will be fermented along with grass and food industry residues, and the biogas released during the process will be used as fuel to heat around 1,100 homes.
General Motors Co. is expected to fully repay its $6.7 billion in U.S. government loans by 2011, four years earlier than required. The auto manufacturer reported the news Monday after announcing recent sales exceeded expectations and costs came in lower than expected.
Under the plan, the automaker said it will begin paying the U.S. Treasury Department $1 billion each quarter, beginning at the end of December.
The highly visible success of the stimulus program known as cash-for-clunkers induced a boom in vehicle sales this summer that clearly would not have happened otherwise.
Now, the Obama administration is looking at creating a new version of the program — this time for home weatherization.
One proposal, which would give households money to pay for weatherization projects that help cut carbon emissions, might be called “cash for caulkers.” Rahm Emanuel told the New York Times, “It’s one of the top things (the president) is looking at.”