[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text css=”.vc_custom_1584121607071{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]Via: Plano Magazine
By: Daly Rea
Texas Women’s Foundation (formerly Dallas Women’s Foundation) has announced the recipients of its 2020 Maura Women Helping Women and Young Leader Awards, which recognize leaders who have positively impacted the lives of women and girls. Award recipients will be honored at the Leadership Forum & Awards Dinner, presented by AT&T on April 30 at the Omni Dallas Hotel. The event will begin at 5:30 p.m. with a sponsor reception, followed by a general reception at 6:00 p.m. At 7:00 p.m. there will be dinner and the presentation of the Maura Award to five outstanding women leaders and one Young Leader Award to an exceptional woman under the age of 40. Co-chairs are Laura Maxwell of Frito-Lay and Nina Vaca of Pinnacle Group, a previous Maura Award recipient.
The event’s keynote speaker is Adriana Gascoigne, author of Tech Boss Lady and founder and CEO of Girls in Tech, a San Francisco-based nonprofit devoted to empowering, educating and engaging women in the tech industry, which has 43 chapters in 32 countries. No stranger to growing brands and building amazing companies, Goscoigne has worked with tech companies like Indiegogo, Oracle’s Involver and Change.org. In 2018, she was named one of the 20 most influential Latinos in technology by CNET and also received the Pioneer Leadership Award at the Silicon Valley Latino Leadership Summit. Her keynote is supported in part by the Catherine M. Coughlin Endowment for Women’s Leadership at Texas Women’s Foundation.
“We are honored to celebrate these amazing women – each one exceptional in her own right – whose remarkable journeys and significant accomplishments are an inspiration to us all,” said Roslyn Dawson Thompson, Texas Women’s Foundation president and chief executive officer. “We are also excited to hear from Adriana Gascoigne, who very much lives up to her book title Tech Boss Lady, and who is a total game-changer through her global work to empower girls and women in the technology industry.’”
Maura Women Helping Women Award:
For 41 years, the Maura Women Helping Women Award has been presented to courageous individuals who have catalyzed change for women and girls. The 2020 Maura recipients will join the esteemed company of more than 200 previous honorees. The 2020 recipients are:
Dana Blankenship
Dana Blankenship is the dynamic CEO and founder of Blankenship Change Consulting, LLC, a female-centric, 75-person strong boutique firm that helps some of the world’s most well-known brands navigate the people side of change as they grow and evolve their organizations. After being in leadership at a large firm, Dana started this more family-centered firm that reflects her passion for building relationships and for nurturing a flexible, supportive environment where women, in particular, can thrive.
Tracey Doi
As Chief Financial Officer for TOYOTA Motor North America, Tracey Doi leads accounting, finance, and corporate strategy for the Toyota and Lexus brands, a value chain with 14 manufacturing plants and 47,000 team members. As part of the executive management team she focuses on driving initiatives for competitive growth. Doi is passionate about the development of leaders at all levels, particularly women and other underrepresented groups. She enjoys supporting the Toyota Business Partnering Groups’ many career development and community initiatives, as well as the Orchid Giving Circle at Texas Women’s Foundation.
Beverly Hill
Before founding the Gendercide Awareness Project (Gendap) in 2011, Beverly Hill worked as a college lecturer and then as a studio artist, creating figurative bronzes and ceramic wall hangings. While still teaching at the University of Iowa, Hill developed a strong interest in global women’s rights and was astonished to learn that in many parts of the world, women and girls are so oppressed that they simply do not survive. Their premature deaths create a measurable dent in the global female population – with 3.7% of it missing. Gendap now raises funds to educate impoverished girls in six developing countries – girls who otherwise could not go to school.
Kathleen LaValle
Kathleen LaValle became president and CEO of Dallas CASA in 2014 following three decades of practicing law. Today she leads the largest CASA program in the country in terms of total children served by volunteers, number of volunteer advocates and annual revenue, with 83 percent of the volunteers being women. In 2019, Dallas CASA and its nearly 1,500 volunteer advocates served more than 3,500 children in foster care. While a partner with Jackson Walker LLP, LaValle headed the women’s initiative, served on the firm-wide diversity committee, and explored solutions to workplace challenges that women faced. She mentored and coached many young women attorneys, and the firm promoted more women to partnership than any other Texas law firm.
Jennifer Stimpson
With a global vision to create change beyond her native Dallas, educator, innovator and entrepreneur Jennifer Stimpson is passionate about educating the next generation of science leaders. She began her career as a forensic chemist with the Drug Enforcement Agency, and now teaches middle school science at The Hockaday School. An award-winning educator for two decades, Stimpson uses field experiences to enrich the curriculum, bringing global, real world science to life for her students and others. Through her JSTEMP/KIC (Knowledge is Chemistry) camps, she creates exciting STEM learning hands-on science experiences for students of all ages, particularly under-resourced youth.
Young Leader Award:
The Young Leader Award recognizes breakthrough leadership exhibited by a trailblazer who is achieving success in a field, initiative or sector, and creating a path of opportunity for other women to follow.
The 2020 honoree is Karla Garcia, Dallas ISD board trustee and secretary, the youngest person and first Latina elected. She was inspired to run for Dallas ISD District 4 trustee because she wanted to address the inequities that she saw in the public school system, particularly in Southeast Dallas. After her family moved to Dallas, her parents’ strong desire to see her obtain a college education led Garcia to attend Dallas ISD’s Irma Lerma Rangel Young Women’s Leadership School, a Young Women’s Preparatory Network School, and the first public all-girls magnet school in Texas. She was the first in her family to attend college, and studied public policy and entrepreneurship at UNC.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]