Help us support these wonderful charities by donating to the Gary Greene Foundation.

Gary Greene Families

  • Whether faced with a house fire, a flood or an unexpected health expense the foundation supports employees and their families in times of real need.

Back Pack Ministries

  • They identify families in the community who are struggling. They purchase food, clothing hygiene products and backpacks. They fill the backpacks with school supplies and distribute donations to help families to prepare for the upcoming school year.

Tomagwa

  • Provides compassionate healthcare to community members with limited resources by offering medical, dental, vision, lab, pharmacy, and case management services. This donation was to help the ministry fill 100 backpacks for kids in need with school supplies.

Camp For All

  • Camp For All is a unique, barrier-free camp working in partnership with other not-for-profit organizations to enrich the lives of children and adults with challenging illnesses or special needs and their families throughout the year.

Sleep in Heavenly Peace

  • Building beds for kids in need and providing new mattresses and bedding so kids and sleep safe and comfortably.

Autism Speaks

  • They are dedicated to promoting solutions, across the spectrum and throughout the life life span, for the needs of individuals with autism and their families. We do this through advocacy and support, increasing understanding and acceptance of people with autism, and advancing research into causes and better interventions for autism spectrum disorder and related conditions.

Triumph over Kids Cancer

  • They improve the lives of children with cancer by raising their spirits, raising the public’s awareness, and funding research to improve the treatment and survivability of pediatric cancers. Each donation is matched dollar for dollar by MD Anderson.

American Heart Association NorthWest

  • It all begins with an idea. Maybe you want to launch a business. Maybe you want to turn a hobby into something more.

National Alopecia

  • Donations are used for research, emotional support and aid to those that cannot afford wigs. These wigs need to be replaced every 3 months. Alopecia areata is a common autoimmune skin disease, causing hair loss on the scalp, face and sometimes on other areas of the body. In fact, it affects as many as 6.8 million people in the U.S. with a lifetime risk of 2.1%. People of all ages, both sexes and all ethnic groups can develop alopecia areata.

Children’s Fund

  • They are dedicated to helping early stage charities fulfill their mission to provide critical services to disadvantaged children across the great Houston Area. The Children’s Fund, Inc. focuses its donation efforts on charities that serve children in the Houston area, with small other charitable support, and limited exposure o he business community.

Operation Snowstorm

  • This organization provides a child who is battling terminal cancer the miracle of a snowstorm! They do this by dumping 10,000 pounds of snow in their front yard. They provide gloves, shovels, toys and sleds so they can be a β€˜Snow Warrior’ for a day.

Windrose Community Easter Event

  • Windrose Community sponsored Easter Egg hunt which benefitted the Friday Harbor Charity their motto is β€œHealing Cancer One Night at a Time.”

Family Point Resources

  • Provides opportunities that foster a love of learning through discovery. 383 students from K-12th grade were served through after school programs and library programs. Meals are served and tutoring with homework. Families apply to be added to the program..

Swing for a cure

  • The foundation was a sponsor for the β€œswing for a cure” golf tournament which benefits the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Only 30,000 children and adults have this disease and the drug companies do not consider this a large enough amount of the population to do much research. Therefore money raised for this foundation is used for research to find a cure.

Kid’s Meals of Montgomery County

  • Gives sack lunches to the 32,000 children in Montgomery County who face debilitating hunger β€”10,000 of them are under the age of six. These meals are delivered directly to the children’s doorsteps. The children under the age of six don’t have access to free school based meals like the older children

Tomball ISD

  • Provides funds to Tomball Staff to use directly on campus. Tomball ISD Staff members apply for grants which are reviewed and scored. These grants are funded annually.

St Luke Foundation Golf Tournament

  • A charity golf tournament was held at The Woodlands Country Club that raised money to help local low income patents get much needed lifesaving mammograms.

Arms Wide Open Childhood

  • Kyle Stepp was a Sunshine Kid and was at many of our events over the years. In 2008 he was diagnosed with Osteosarcoma a rare and aggressive bone cancer with a 20% survival rate. He selected to have a limb salvage surgery, which replaced his femur, tibia, and knee and replace them with an internal prosthetic in 2009. He was in a terrible biking accident this fall and as a result he had to have emergency leg amputation above the knee. Arms Wide Open Childhood was helping Kyle to raise funds to cover his substantial medical costs and prosthetics.

Cyfair Education Foundation

  • Donations to the Cy-Fair Educational Foundation helps students discover a brighter future through student scholarships and staff development programs.

Giving Gown Foundation

  • A full day of activity for senior high school girls who have been identified as underserved or have a difficult financial circumstance. School counselors help to identify students that need help who are in safe houses from sex trafficking, domestic abuse and foster care. Meals are provided, they are enrolled in an empowerment workshop that encourages them to strive. They are paired with a fairy godmother that assists in helping them to find the perfect prom dress all free of charge

Pearl Museum

  • A life-long Texan, Pearl Lilley Fincher was born in the town of Evergreen in 1935 and moved to Spring in 1952, where she lived until her death in 2010. Pearl was a community and arts advocate who truly lives by the philosophy β€œto whom much is given, much is required.” She served on the boards of the American Heart Association. The Tomball Regional Arts Committee, The Centrum Arts League and the Pearl Fincher Museum of Fine Arts. The museum was named in honor of Pearl Fincher for her significant contributions to the community of Greater Northwest Houston.

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