Trailblazing social-change entrepreneur Veronika Scott to visit UB

Veronika Scott, standing in a room with several tables and sewing machines.

Veronika Scott, CEO and founder of Empowerment Plan, will speak at UB on March 31.

Release Date: March 30, 2015 This content is archived.

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“Now, more than ever, I encourage students to take what they learn and to apply those core principles to greater problems facing neighborhoods, communities or society as a whole. It is up to us to make a difference.”
Veronika Scott, CEO and founder, Empowerment Plan

BUFFALO, N.Y. – After a winter of record-setting cold, the University at Buffalo Undergraduate Academies plan to heat things up through a visit from social entrepreneurship icon Veronika Scott.

Named one of Forbes 30 Under 30 Social Entrepreneurs, Scott is CEO and founder of the Empowerment Plan, a nonprofit that hires formerly homeless women to create self-heating coats that double as sleeping bags for the homeless.

Scott will share her journey and insights with the campus and Buffalo community as the 2015 Civic Engagement Keynote Speaker.

The event, Spread the Warmth, is scheduled for Tuesday, March 31, at 7 p.m. in the UB Center for the Arts Drama Theatre on the North Campus.

The lecture is free and open to the public. Guests are encouraged to RSVP at academies.buffalo.edu.

Media are welcome to attend. On-site contact is Hadar Borden, UB Academies administrative director, 716-984-0250.

“Veronika is young and her own social entrepreneurship sprang from a classroom project,” says Barbara Bono, associate professor of English and academic director of the Civic Engagement Academy.

“This is an amazing trajectory for a student. She is an inspirational model of what they could do to improve their community by the time they’re 30 years old.”

The product behind The Empowerment Plan, the EMPWR coat, was imagined during a design course Scott enrolled in as an undergraduate at the College for Creative Studies. There, she crafted sleek models of everyday products, such as toaster ovens and dishwashers.

It wasn’t until a professor challenged her to approach her designs differently that Scott realized she could create products with a greater social purpose.

“This one class truly changed my life, and subsequently, the lives of thousands of homeless individuals across the nation,” says Scott. “I think so many students feel there is a disconnect between their academic courses and the real world they are about to enter.

“Now, more than ever, I encourage students to take what they learn and to apply those core principles to greater problems facing neighborhoods, communities or society as a whole. It is up to us to make a difference.”

The Empowerment Plan has already expanded beyond Scott’s hometown of Detroit to 29 states and three Canadian provinces. To date, the company has produced more than 9,000 coats and employs 20 formerly homeless people.

In addition to her lecture, Scott will spend two days meeting with UB students, faculty and staff.

Scott will sit on a panel discussion that will allow faculty and staff to pick her brain on tying together education and community engagement; coach a workshop for students on creating social change; and meet with the leaders of the Design Innovation Garage (dig), 43 North, Innovation Center and several Buffalo social startups.

“Detroit is a city much like Buffalo, a Rust-Belt city on the rise,” says Borden. “Veronika's visit in the community might offer the momentum needed to make progress on an initiative or highlight the good work being done by service providers working to support and empower the homeless community in Western New York.”

Spread the Warmth is sponsored by the UB Academies, UB Sustainability, Office of Student Engagement, Intercultural Diversity Center and University Honors College.

Media Contact Information

Marcene Robinson is a former staff writer in University Communications. To contact UB's media relations staff, email ub-news@buffalo.edu or visit our list of current university media contacts.