Sam Pack Ford Investing in the Future
The Sam Pack’s Five Star Ford Carrollton & Ford Motor Company donated a new SUV to RL Turner High School’s Automotive program. Alex Sagcal, Sam Pack Ford Dealership’s public relations manager, said, “Every year for the past 12 years, the dealership has donated one to two $2,000 scholarships to Carrollton-Farmers Branch ISD (CFBISD) students in automotive tech programs. While donations and scholarships are familiar territory, the dealership has never donated a functioning vehicle to a school.”
The new vehicle will provide students with hands-on experience working on a late-model engine, better preparing them for careers in the automotive industry.
Sames Auto Group Partnering with Driscoll Children’s Hospital
Sames Auto Group, based in Laredo, Texas, is partnering with Driscoll Children’s Hospital to give back to the community. For the month of April, Sames is donating a percentage of its sales to the hospital. All funds will be used for the needs of the hospital in Harlingen that is scheduled to open in May.
Laura and Joe Street Name WT A&M’s School of Nursing with $2.5 Million Gift
A prominent Amarillo couple is making their largest-ever personal gift to West Texas A&M University to support its nursing program. Laura and Joe Street joined with WT officials during a March 7 press conference to announce their $2.5 million gift to establish the Laura and Joe Street School of Nursing in WT’s College of Nursing and Health Sciences.
With this gift, the One West comprehensive fundraising campaign — which fuels the University’s long-range plan, WT 125: From the Panhandle to the World — has raised nearly $160 million, smashing its original goal of $125 million and growing ever closer to reaching the current goal of $175 million.
Laura earned a Bachelor of Science in nursing and a family nurse practitioner master’s degree at WT soon after the couple made Amarillo their home in 1984. Laura Street also is a 2018 WT Distinguished Alumna.
“We have always stayed involved with WT nursing,” Laura said. “The department is one of the best in the state and nation, and we know that for it to continue to grow and meet the needs of the Panhandle, more students will need scholarships, and we’ll need more endowed professorships to attract and retain faculty members.”
“Ultimately, we want to make sure everyone realizes the value of nursing education,” Laura said. Joe concurred with her statement.
“This is really important to us, and we’re just glad to do it,” he said. “We know how important the Amarillo medical community is to this region, and we know that WT is helping battle the critical shortage of nursing in this area.”
In addition to providing a $500,000 endowment for operational support of the Street School of Nursing, the gift will provide $1.4 million in scholarships and graduate assistantships and $600,000 to name two new professorships: the Laura Street Distinguished Professor of Nursing and the Todd David Street Distinguished Professor of Psychiatric Mental Health, named for the late brother of Joe Street.
The professors will be appointed at a later date.
“Laura, I imagine your education and experience in the nursing profession played a part in your decision to invest in the students and faculty through this generous naming gift. As the husband to a nursing professional myself, I understand the lifelong, deep abiding commitment to the wellbeing of others,” WT President Walter V. Wendler said in prepared comments. “Laura and Joe, I am honored to be part of celebrating your generosity to WT, which is emblematic of your lives of service and giving in the community.”
The couple, who bought Street Toyota after arriving in Amarillo and founded Street Volkswagen of Amarillo, also prioritize the education of mental health professionals.
“We have a shortage of medical providers, in particular in mental health,” Laura said. “They are essential to our future, to our health and to our wellbeing in the Panhandle and beyond.”
Recently, the College of Nursing and Health Sciences announced the fall 2024 launch of a new psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner degree program, aimed to provide trained professionals for a new mental health hospital to be built in Amarillo.
Elevating the nursing program from a department to a school makes it a larger and more distinctive unit within the college. A request for approval of the naming and restructuring has been submitted to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.
The announcement was made in the simulation lab on the Baptist Community Services Nursing Education Floor of Harrington Academic Hall WTAMU Amarillo Center, 720 S. Tyler St.
The Amarillo Center now houses 250 undergraduate bachelor of nursing students and about 20 nursing faculty and staff. In its 25,000 square feet, the BCS Nursing Education Floor includes state-of-the-art simulation labs and other innovative educational spaces.
As the population ages and the healthcare needs become more complex, the demand for nurses will continue to rise, said Dr. Holly Jeffreys, dean of WT’s College of Nursing and Health Sciences.
“Today, Laura and Joe Street made a courageous decision to take WT nursing to the next level in becoming a school of nursing,” Jeffreys said in prepared comments. “For both students and faculty, this means additional opportunity for growth while ensuring ample educational resources and support. For you as a consumer of healthcare, it can mean better health outcomes, as the quality of care you receive directly impacts the outcomes of your health. For WT, it means we will continue to work together to meet the needs and demands of the Texas Panhandle.”
Established in 1972 and graduating its first students in 1974, WT’s Department of Nursing currently provides about 70% of nurses employed throughout the Texas Panhandle.
WT nursing graduates, over the past five years, have averaged a 97% score on the National Council Licensure Examination, required by the National Council of State Boards of Nursing to test the competency of nursing school graduates in the United States and Canada. Nationally, the average is 85%; in Texas, it’s 87%.
“Your gift is transformative, not only for WT, but also for the Panhandle, the region, the state and, from here, the world,” said Leah McLain, cochair of the One West campaign leadership committee, in prepared comments.
The Street School of Nursing is the second school established during the One West campaign, following the February 2023 announcement of the Amarillo National Bank School of Accounting Economics and Finance in the Paul and Virginia Engler College of Business.
Before the campaign, it had been nearly a decade since WT had formed a school, since both the School of Music and the School of Engineering & Computer Sciences were formed in 2012. In January 2020, Engineering was elevated to the College of Engineering.
Peltier Auto Group 13th Annual Teacher’s Scholarship
Giving back, it’s in Robert Peltier’s blood. That’s why Peltier Auto Group of Tyler, Texas, is now in its 13th year of handing out scholarships to 50 deserving East Texas students. The Peltier Teacher’s Scholarship Program is available to outstanding students graduating high school or currently enrolled in college as an undergraduate. Additionally, the student must have a parent who is an educator (a teacher, administrator or paraprofessional). These scholarships are given out annually to help families offset the cost of tuition, fees, books, room and board.
City Limits Subaru Partners with Austin Angels to Share the Love®
We are thrilled to announce we got to be a part of something truly special at the Austin Marathon
City Limits Subaru came together with their Subaru Share the Love® Event partner, Austin Angels, to surprise one very deserving young man with a brand new 2024 Subaru Impreza! Abel Rodriguez ran the half marathon with his Austin Angels mentor, Connor Copeland.
Abel’s story is inspiring. A former foster youth and the oldest in a family of eight siblings, Abel has been a part of the Austin Angels Dare to Dream program since he was 14. Abel is now a freshman at the University of Texas at San Antonio and has been enduring three-hour bus commutes to and from Austin to see his siblings and attend leadership meetings. He was in dire need of safe, reliable transportation. When Austin Angels shared his story, City Limits Subaru was deeply moved and knew they had to help.
“We are so grateful for the opportunity to serve our community and so thankful for the partnership with Austin Angels. Abel, we hope you drive many happy miles in that new Impreza! Your hard work has earned it,” said General Manager PJ Shelley.