Philanthropy awardee builds on reputation of giving
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Andrew Edwards
He doesn’t need the money, so he’s going to give it away.
Newport Beach’s Larry Webb won $150,000 last week when he received
the Hearthstone Builder Lifetime Public Service Award, given annually
to honor philanthropically inclined members of the homebuilding
industry.
“I’ve never won an award that came with a cash prize that I could
pass on to someone more needy,” Webb said.
Webb, 56, is the chief executive of John Laing Homes, a Newport
Beach-based company that builds houses in California and Colorado.
Webb received the award Jan. 14 in Orlando, Fla., at what he called a
“humbling” banquet during the International Builders’ Show.
He said on Thursday that he would divide the prize money equally
between three groups -- Costa Mesa-based HomeAid America; the Sage
Hill School in Newport Coast; and Interval House, a Seal Beach
organization that shelters victims of domestic violence.
Webb said he and other builders believe giving should be part of
their industry’s culture, and companies have many opportunities to
improve they communities where they have projects.
“Some might be as small as sponsoring a Little League team; some
might be as big as building a shelter for groups,” Webb said.
HomeAid America builds temporary homeless shelters across the
United States, and through his positions in the homebuilding
industry, Webb has helped to build five Orange County shelters for
the organization, HomeAid chief executive Genette Eaton said.
In addition to cash, Webb has sent contractors and suppliers to
help build HomeAid shelters.
“It’s not just money; it’s heart and labor,” Eaton said.
The shelters are located in Santa Ana, Placentia, Midway City and
Orange, Webb said.
HomeAid was one of multiple groups that nominated Webb for the
award, Eaton said.
He has worked with the group since its founding in 1989, when he
was a member of the group’s Orange County board of directors.
He now serves on the charity’s national board.
Webb’s daughter Laura is a Sage Hill graduate, and his daughter
Emily is a student there now.
John Garvan, the school’s director of development, said people at
Sage Hill were thrilled to hear that Webb had received the award and
that school officials would wait to hear how Webb wanted the money
spent before they decided how to use it.
Webb said he wanted to meet Sage Hill headmaster Clint Wilkins to
discuss ways to use the money, with scholarships being one of Webb’s
priorities.
Webb said HomeAid America and Interval House decide on their own
how to use the money.
The Hearthstone Builder Lifetime Public Service Awards are
sponsored by Hearthstone Advisors, a San Francisco-based firm that
invests in residential development, and Builder Magazine, a trade
publication for the homebuilding industry.
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