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Fuller’s gift transformative for Cony students Letter Share I am responding to the Feb. 28 letter from Michael Garguilo of Waterville regarding the turf field project in Augusta (“People are hungry; Cony turf should wait“). Mr. Garguilo questioned why the Augusta School District is spending $2.6 million on turf fields vs. laying off cafeteria staff. The two items referenced have no correlation. School expenses are appropriated through the school budget process, funded by Augusta taxpayers. Unlike recent turf projects completed or underway (Messalonskee, Gardiner and Bangor), the Augusta turf field project has no municipal funding. The disappointment among student-athletes, their families, and the entire community when the project was put on hold last year was distressing. I can’t begin to describe the feeling of euphoria that Bob Fuller’s transformative gift created, particularly among the student-athletes who lost so much over the past year. ....
Community Compass: Fuller’s gifts will last generations By Dave Rollins and Bill Bridgeo Share We write to publicly acknowledge the generosity of longtime local philanthropist Robert J. Fuller Jr. and to thank him on behalf of the City Council and our community for his kind-heartedness in general and for his most recent $1.64 million gift in particular. As many are aware, Bob Fuller had a distinguished career as a local attorney, a partner in one of Maine’s premier law firms. He also served our nation as a longtime senior officer in the Naval Reserve. For many years, he has supported a wide array of worthy local causes, ranging from our community hospital, to the preservation of our deep and rich local history, to the renovation and expansion of our library, to our first-class YMCA complex and to local scholarship funds. ....
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By Staff Philanthropist Robert G. Fuller Jr., who has a long history of supporting Augusta-area causes, has committed $1,640,000 to complete Cony High School s athletic field upgrades, a city of Augusta project that had stalled for lack of funds. Fuller, a former Augusta-area attorney with area roots that go back centuries, said that the donation is an investment in Augusta s future. “I believe that when a high school has a continuing history of athletic success, it fosters a sense of community pride, Fuller said in a news release from the city. It rubs off. When this pride is evident it becomes easier to attract people who’ll add value doctors, teachers, artists, entrepreneurs and who’ll choose to stay around. Not only because Augusta has the superior facilities and services they demand but it’s also where a visitor can detect that its citizens are upbeat and enjoy living where they are. ....
Posted on 10660 TEGNA Inc. (NYSE: TGNA) today announced that stations WFAA (Dallas, Texas) and KING 5 (Seattle, Washington) have received 2021 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards, among the highest honors given for excellence in journalism. WFAA was honored for “VERIFY Road Trip: Climate Truth,” which took a climate change skeptic on a journey through Texas and Alaska to meet experts and witness first-hand the effects of global warming. KING 5 won for their documentary “Bob’s Choice,” chronicling the final months of a 75-year-old terminally ill cancer patient who chose to end his life under Washington’s Death with Dignity Act. “Each of our station recipients represent the power of local journalism to inform and inspire the communities we serve,” said Lynn Beall, EVP and COO for media operations, TEGNA. “Through empathetic and impactful reporting, WFAA and KING 5 helped audiences gai ....