Business & Tech
OhanaHC, Matthew Plantz Receive Community Foundation of Howard County Awards
The Community Foundation of Howard County has named OhanaHC and Matthew Plantz as two award recipients for 2021.
HOWARD COUNTY, MD — The Community Foundation of Howard County, which raises, manages and distributes funds to support Howard County nonprofits, presented the Casey and Pebble Willis Making a Difference Award to OhanaHC and the Leadership Council Award to Matthew Plantz at the foundation’s annual dinner and celebration of philanthropy held virtually Dec. 2.
OhanaHC was established in 2020 with a dual mission to both empower Howard County students to overcome barriers and achieve self-defined success and to build community by developing relationships between people outside expected social circles. The organization seeks to surround a student starting in ninth grade with a diverse group of four adults to form a unit called an “ohana,” which means family in Hawaiian. OhanaHC started with 10 freshmen last school year and has grown to 40 students and 160 volunteer mentors.
The Casey and Pebble Willis Making a Difference Award recognizes the program of a nonprofit organization in Howard County and includes a $3,000 award in support. Established in 2000, the award memorializes Carolyn “Casey” Willis, a community activist who lived in Howard County for 26 years and her husband, Dr. Eugene “Pebble” Willis, an orthopedic surgeon.
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Plantz serves on the board of Howard County Autism Society and participates on committees and a housing task force with the society. He volunteers for advocacy days in Annapolis and Washington, D.C., and presents about autism at schools and community organizations, adding his perspective as a person with disabilities.
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