Press Release โ Download Word doc: 900K down and four point one million to go – press release FINAL
$900K down, $4.1 Million To Go
Local Anderson Township couples Kitzmillers, OโBriens launch $5M Impact Fund with $500,000 donation, anchoring IMPACT Autism Endowment, fundingย Impact Innovation program at UC
ย Campaign to raise $5M that will fundย UC programย started in 2014, serving autistic/challenged students.
Laura and Paul Kitzmiller, Diana and David OโBrien put their $$ where their hearts are.
Mayfield Golf Classic, supported by CORE Resources andย IMPACT Autism, celebrates 20 years.
[CINCINNATI, Ohio ~ October 19, 2019] Paul Kitzmiller, et al, have seen their local non-profit machine benefitting autistic kids and their families,ย IMPACT Autism, grow beyond any early expectations.
For years, thereโs been a major golf outing fundraiser and telethon, raising hundreds of thousands (Mayfield Golf Classic, 20-year anniversary this Monday, Oct. 21, at Coldstream Country Club).
Then, a foundation (IMPACT Autism).
A few years ago, an expansion into technology, education and employment (Impact Innovation at UC).
Today, they are still all about community outreach, events, and strategic initiatives. But someone, something, or somebody needs to keep the lights on atย IMPACT Autism, and the invaluable teachers and assistants at UC paid.
Enter: the new $5 million drive, announced in concert with the 20-year Mayfield Golf Classic. The money is currently being raised through donors and private individuals, as the โImpact Fundโ campaign.
It will vest the IMPACT Autism Endowment, which financesย Impact Innovation at UC. The major players are the Kitzmiller, Mayfield, and OโBrien families,ย IMPACT Autism,ย CORE Resources Inc., and friends and supporters of all the aforementioned.
Kitzmiller, his wife Laura, and their lifelong friends Diana and David OโBrien โ through their namesake charity,ย IMPACT Autism, and its main event, the upcoming Mayfield Golf Classic โ have committed $500,000 to launch the endowment atย IMPACT Autism.
Impact Innovation, a day program teaching real-world skills in an authentic collegiate environment, was launched in 2014 byย IMPACT Autismย and the University of Cincinnati. Another $400,000 has also been pledged from anonymous individuals.
The future is now at the University of Cincinnati, where its program for persons with intellectual disabilities has already helped over 150 students attend an engaging program.
โEntering adulthood can be challenging for anyone. For those with intellectual and developmental disabilities, it can be extremely difficult,โ said Paul Kitzmiller, president and CEO ofย CORE Resources Inc.ย of Anderson Township.
โTheir opportunities for meaningful employment and personal fulfillment are severely limited. Our program changes that, by immersing them in an inclusive, safe environment that allows individuals to learn, grow, and improve their own lives.โ
IMPACT Autismย was founded in 2006 by the Kitzmillers and OโBriens. Paul and Laura Kitzmiller and Diana (Mayfield) OโBrien are childhood friends. The OโBriens are raising triplets with severe autism.
Since 2006,ย IMPACT Autismย has raised and donated more than $4 million to causes associated with dealing with autism.
โComing out of high school, the future can be overwhelming: What do they do now?โ said Diana OโBrien.
โWith the help of some truly amazing people, that answer can be, โNext lives here, at theย UC Impact Innovation program.โ โ
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ย Contact: Mr. Paul Kitzmiller (513) 309-1513 (txt-friendly)ย pkitzmiller@core-1.com


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