Business

Caesars, foundation donate $750,00 to education group

  • Alyssa Orr/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Dell Robison Middle School student Aaron Quinteros, 13, on Friday helps unload boxes filled with donated supplies from Caesars Entertainment that were given to Dell Robison Middle School. Caesars Entertainment donated a substantial amount of money and school supplies to the middle school. » Buy this photo

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  • Aaron Quinteros, a 13-year-old Robison Middle School student, on Friday helps unload boxes full of school supplies donated by gaming company Caesars Entertainment Corp. Alyssa Orr/Las Vegas Review-Journal » Buy this photo

  • Caesars Entertainment Corp. employees unload boxes filled with donated supplies Friday at Robison Middle School. The school was one of four valley middle schools to receive notepads, pens and other supplies collected from meetings and conventions at the casino company's Las Vegas properties. Alyssa Orr/Las Vegas Review-Journal » Buy this photo

By CAITLIN MCGARRY
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Sep. 9, 2011 | 4:46 p.m.

Music teacher Scott Taflin regularly peruses the aisles of gently used school supplies available at the Public Education Foundation's Teacher Exchange center.

Every other week, Taflin, a 19-year Clark County School District veteran who teaches at Sunrise Acres Elementary School, fills his car with recycled notebooks, pens and other supplies for students in need of essentials or new teachers setting up their classrooms.

Taflin said the exchange has "made a huge difference. I've got thousands of items in my room right now."

On Friday, Caesars Entertainment Corp. and the Caesars Foundation pledged to support the Teacher Exchange with a $750,000 grant to be used over the next three years.

This is the second three-year grant the gaming operator's private foundation has awarded the Public Education Foundation since 2008. The company's contributions to the nonprofit total $1.5 million.

The Teacher Exchange was launched in 2002 as an emporium of recycled school supplies where teachers like Taflin can donate $20 in exchange for 500 points to spend on supplies. Rows of notebooks, journals, backpacks, T-shirts and even televisions line the exchange's southwest valley warehouse at 3165 W. Sunset Road.

Teachers typically spend $1,600 out-of-pocket every year to set up their classrooms, Public Education Foundation President Judi Steele said.

In the last four years, teachers have picked up more than 1 million items valued at $3 million from the exchange.

Caesars on Friday also contributed a bus full of notepads, pens and other supplies collected from meetings and conventions at its Las Vegas properties to four Clark County School District middle schools. The school supply donation is part of the company's CodeGreen sustainability initiative. Every year, Caesars' sales and meetings teams donate $43,000 in supplies left over from conventions at its resorts.

The Public Education Foundation relies on private donations, many from local businesses, of gently used supplies to stock the shelves of the Teacher Exchange. Caesars' $1.5 million commitment to the Teacher Exchange is the largest donation the program has received.

Contributing to the Southern Nevada public education system is a tenet of the Caesars Foundation's philanthropy.

"When you have a ready-to-work work force, there's a huge benefit to all businesses," said Rick Mazer, Caesars Entertainment's regional vice president. "One of the more difficult things to do is when you go out and recruit and end up interviewing folks who are not prepared to enter the work force.

"That's costly to every business, either from not hiring, or hiring and having extensive basic training that has to occur in addition to the job training," Mazer said.

The $750,000 grant will be used over the next three years for overhead, transporting school supplies, finding new donors and developing the Teacher Exchange website for educators who can't make it to the southwest Las Vegas warehouse, Steele said.

Clark County School District Superintendent Dwight Jones urged the district's administrators to contribute to the program by sponsoring a teacher's membership to the Teacher Exchange. Jones said he plans to sponsor his 8-year-old son's Stuckey Elementary teacher.

Contact reporter Caitlin McGarry at cmcgarry@lvbusinesspress.com or 702-387-5273.

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  1. Big Julie Sep. 10, 2011 | 5:26 p.m. Report Abuse

    If the kids parents didn't blow their wages at caesars properties they could afford to outfit them for school without this sham "donation" bs.

  2. n7v.blogspot.com Sep. 10, 2011 | 2:17 p.m. Report Abuse

    We can't tell a private business how to spend its own money, but there's good reason to prohibit them from donating to public education.

    Such contributions don't make government any smaller.

    Abolish the corporate income tax.
    Abolish public education.

    If you want to support education, then I suggest you give to a worthy *private* school.

  3. JR Sep. 10, 2011 | 12:39 p.m. Report Abuse

    Hilarious! They don't want to fund schools with taxes and then they get a big headline with this donation. It's a fraction of a fraction of what Ceasars should be really be paying. Gaming pays 6.75 and can't afford to pay anymore? They laugh all the way to the bank, even as they invest in casinos in states that tax quadruple that amount. What a joke.

  4. caterpillar Sep. 10, 2011 | 9:11 a.m. Report Abuse

    Show the headline as the full $750,000. Showing a headline of only $750,00 is a slap in the face to Caesars. I am not a big fan of Caesars but they deserve better than this.

  5. jr1960 Sep. 10, 2011 | 4:02 a.m. Report Abuse

    Might want to add the missing zero to the headline...hate to think Caesars only gave 750.00...

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