Trustees of the
Beavers Charitable Trust
Lynn E. Barr, Pendleton Group LLC, Chairman
Ronald M. Fedrick, Nova Group, Inc., Vice-Chairman
Sam E. Baker, Jr., Oles Morrison Baker & Rinker LLC
Gerard M. Kenny, Kenny Partners
Ralph G. Larison, Larison Construction Services
Thomas W. Traylor, Traylor Bros. Inc.
James D. Waltze, Griffith Company, Ex-Officio
Ronald P. Wells, Stacy & Witbeck, Inc., Ex-Officio
Purpose of the Trust
The purpose of the Trust is to distribute funds, generated by the
trust assets, in the form of grants and scholarships to institutions
of higher education in schools of engineering and construction
management.
Founded in 1977
The Beavers Charitable Trust is a non-profit organization first established
in August 1977 through the foresight of the Board of Directors of
the Beavers Inc. The Beavers established the Trust with a donation
of $50,000 dollars. The first Trustees of the Beavers Charitable
Trust were John P. Stoult, J. L. Feller, Lawrence R. Tollenaere,
and James E. Dunn. Since that eventful era, the estate of the Beavers
Charitable Trust has grown, through the efforts of many generous
donors, to over $9 million dollars. In 2007 the Trust will
generate $400,000 in scholarship grants. A pledge form is available
at the bottom of this page if you would like to participate either
with a one-time gift or multi-year pledge.
Exclusively for the Construction Industry
The Beavers Charitable Trust is home for hundreds of donors who have
chosen this tax-favored means of charitable giving. Their gifts have
created a permanent endowment that forever enables the Beavers Charitable
Trust to make grants and scholarships to schools and universities.
The Beavers Charitable Trust devotes its proceeds for the exclusive
purpose of assisting students entering the heavy construction industry.
The funds from which the Beavers Charitable Trust distributes grants
and scholarships, are derived solely from interest, dividends and
equity appreciation earned from contributions made to the trust estate
by the members of the Beavers. Those contributions are made either
directly from the members or from surplus funds from the activities
of the Beavers organization.
Industry's on-going need for highly skilled new people In today's
highly competitive world, the modern construction company cannot
afford less than the best and brightest personnel. Often, it is not
only a case of staying competitive, but of survival.
Look over your personnel records for the last several years. If you
grant an honest appraisal, you will probably find the average age
of your employees is getting older every year. Unfortunately that
is typical of the construction industry.
There are a lot of reasons for this aging of the industry: Poor business
climate, industry down-sizing, unstable, mobile workforce, etc. But
a far more insidious reason is that too many young people do not
view the heavy construction business as a viable alternative for
career development. That spells trouble for the long-term survival
of the industry.
From the student's perspective, cutbacks in education funding for
construction management and civil engineering programs, have forced
departments to reduce the number of classes offered making it more
competitive, extending the time to graduate, and of course making
it all more expensive. Add to that the strong appeal of other industries,
and you begin to see a disturbing trend.
Click the link below for more information:
Listing of schools
Guidelines for Recipients of Scholarships
Pledge Form for Contributions
|
 |