Massive $7 billion order for private jets raises eyebrows: 'This report presents further proof ...'
The company, which offers "fractional ownership" of jets — allowing users to purchase a share of a jet for a set amount of time — placed an order with Embraer Executive Jets that is valued at up to $7 billion. The deal guarantees Flexjet 182 new aircraft, with options for 30 more and an extended service agreement, Forbes reported.
The vast majority of these new aircraft will be Praetors, which is Embraer's larger model.
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The move is seen as a positive for the ultrawealthy, who are the typical users of private aviation. It's less encouraging, however, for those who care about the changing climate.
Commercial aviation is responsible for about 4% of global heat-trapping gases, which pollute the air and cause rising temperatures. Private jets typically have only a handful of people on board and often fly short distances (about half of flights were 310 miles or less), making it the most energy-intensive form of flying.
Private jets still make up a small portion of the total commercial-aviation landscape, but the sector is growing rapidly. A study published in Nature found that pollution from private flights increased by 46% between 2019 and 2023.
"This report presents further proof that billionaires are causing the climate crisis," Jonathan Westin, executive director of the Climate Organizing Hub, told PBS. "They are clinging to their private jets and oil profits while regular people see increasing floods, hurricanes, and wildfires."
Fortunately, while some companies are actively making Earth more polluted with their aviation decisions, others are working toward solutions.
There are also promising developments in the private sector for aviation's future. Several companies are developing hybrid or fully electric aircraft, with test flights proving successful. One is looking at how to turn polluted air from a cement factory into cleaner jet fuel.
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CNBC
an hour ago
- CNBC
Bill Gates meets Willy Wonka: How Epic's 82-year-old billionaire CEO, Judy Faulkner, built her software factory
Do not go public. Do not acquire or be acquired. Software must work. These are the first three of the 10 commandments splashed across bathrooms and breakrooms at Epic Systems' sprawling 1,670-acre campus in Verona, Wisconsin, just southwest of Madison. It's not the wackiest part of working at the health-care software giant. Once a month, most of the company's 14,000 employees pack into an underground auditorium called Deep Space for a mandatory staff meeting, which some jokingly refer to as "work church." Executives go over company news and objectives. They also lead a grammar lesson, such as whether it's OK to end sentences with a preposition and when to use "who" or "whom." Epic's CEO is 82-year-old Judy Faulkner, who started the company in a Wisconsin basement in 1979 and has helmed the enterprise ever since. En route to building a business with $5.7 billion in annual revenue, Faulkner has kept significant distance from her tech peers, both physically and otherwise. Epic is about 2,000 miles east of both Seattle and Silicon Valley, and the company has never taken money from venture capitalists. "I've described her as a female cross between Bill Gates and Willy Wonka," Dr. Eric Dickson, CEO of UMass Memorial Health, said in an interview. The hospital system is an Epic customer, Dickson said, adding that he's known Faulkner for around 20 years. While Wonka is, of course, a fictional character, Gates for many years was the world's wealthiest person, thanks to his enormous stake in Microsoft, before donating his way to 14th on the Forbes billionaires list. At the top of the leaderboard is Tesla's Elon Musk, followed by Oracle's Larry Ellison, Meta's Mark Zuckerberg and Amazon's Jeff Bezos. Faulkner ranks 430th, with an estimated net worth of $7.8 billion, based on what Forbes says is her 43% ownership of Epic. The publication lists Epic as among the five largest private U.S. tech software and services companies by revenue. Epic is best known for its dominance in electronic health record, or EHR, software. An EHR is a digital version of a patient's medical history that's updated by doctors and nurses. About 42% of acute care hospitals in the U.S. use Epic, putting it way ahead of Oracle Health, which is in second place at 23%, according to an April report from Klas Research. Oracle acquired its way into the market with the $28 billion purchase of Cerner, a deal that closed in 2022. Epic says its technology is used in 3,300 hospitals and 71,000 clinics and by 325 million patients worldwide. Starting Monday, thousands of health-care executives will descend on Epic's corporate headquarters for the company's Users Group Meeting, one of its largest annual on-campus events. As ubiquitous as Epic's technology is across much of the health-care sector, doctors, hospital administrators, startups and patients have their share of complaints about the software's user experience and its interoperability, or ability to work with other tools. "With half a million or so clinicians using Epic, there will be some who find it easy and some who find it difficult," an Epic spokesperson said in a statement. Some folks might question Epic's commitment to its third commandment, but there's no doubting the company's allegiance to the first one. From Epic's early days, Faulkner has been averse to the idea of running a public company and what she's called the "tyranny of the quarter." She said she came to that view after researching public companies and reading shareholder comments. "They were vitriolic, in many cases, because the only thing they were looking at was return on their investment," Faulkner told CNBC. "Sometimes, there's a lot more than that." Without the benefit of public stock, Faulkner's wealth doesn't multiply at the same rate as that of her fellow tech founders and CEOs. She's fine with that. Faulkner, who rarely grants interviews, agreed to sit down for a half-hour chat with CNBC at Epic's headquarters, where office buildings are themed, with many inspired by fiction, including "The Wizard of Oz," "Alice in Wonderland" and the Harry Potter stories. The interview took place in the Andromeda building in a conference room called The Cottage, which is connected to her office. Two of the walls are plastered with quotes such as "The geek shall inherit the Earth" and "All lasting business is built on friendship." Faulkner's dog Tundra, a fluffy Samoyed, also made an appearance. Faulkner celebrated her 82nd birthday Monday. While she has yet to publicly disclose when she plans to step down from her role, Faulkner confirmed that she has a succession plan in place that ensures Epic will remain privately held and constructed firmly as she envisioned long after she's gone. Faulkner has never sold any of her voting shares, and that stock will be transferred into a trust after her death, according to Faulkner and Epic. The plan for now is that the trust will be governed by a voting committee made up of Faulkner's husband, Dr. Gordon Faulkner, a retired pediatrician; her three children, and five longtime Epic employees, though Faulkner said she might include some additional staffers to make sure enough voices are represented. Members of the committee can't vote for the company to go public or be acquired, among other rules, as she has previously disclosed. Some of the provisions are less consequential, such as a recommendation that the trust's telephone hold music should be classical. "I like classical music," she said. "I think when I was a child that it was played in our house a lot, just on the radio, just on the record player." For further safekeeping, Faulkner established an oversight board called "The Trust Protector Committee," Epic said, consisting of three health-care leaders — all Epic users. Its job is to sue members of the trust's voting committee if they don't follow the rules. The names of members of the voting committee and oversight board won't be released, Faulkner told CNBC, but she said she's identified who she would like to participate. After running Epic for the past 46 years, Faulkner has amassed her fair share of admirers and critics, with some in the latter camp even taking Epic to court. But Faulkner continues to flout conventional business practices and has built Epic, despite its flaws and complexities, into the most powerful technology company in U.S. health care. Reflecting on her approach to leadership and decision-making, Faulkner said, "Just have the guts to do what you know is the right thing to do." CNBC spoke with two dozen Epic customers, former Epic employees, industry experts and people close to Faulkner for this article, some of whom asked not to be named in order to speak freely. Details about Faulkner's personal, educational and professional history were obtained from Faulkner directly, her Epic website testimonials, Epic, obituaries, news reports and publicly available records. Faulkner and her two siblings grew up in Erlton, New Jersey, now a part of Cherry Hill. Her father, Louis Greenfield, was an independent pharmacist who ran his own store, complete with a soda fountain. Her mother, Del Greenfield, was a peace activist who was involved with the South Jersey Peace Center and the Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility, which shared in the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize for its work in preventing nuclear war. "Sometimes when I do something that's tough, I think of my mother, who went to jail in her 80s for protesting at a nuclear arms site, and I think, 'I'm my mother's daughter,'" Faulkner said. Faulkner's parents, who both died in 2007, are honored at Epic's campus. Employees can get ice cream at Lou's Soda Fountain, while Del's Nobel Prize certificate hangs in the hallway across from The Cottage. Faulkner discovered a love of math as a seventh grader, when her teacher would leave puzzles on the blackboard each day, she said in one of her testimonials, the short stories and anecdotes she shares once a month on Epic's website. She earned her undergraduate degree in math from Dickinson College in 1965. After learning how to program during a summer job, Faulkner then enrolled in the University of Wisconsin–Madison's nascent computer science program and was in graduate school there until 1970. At UW–Madison, Faulkner took a course about computing in medicine that was taught by a pioneering physician, Dr. Warner Slack, one of the first people to recognize the promise of the technology within health care. Faulkner began working with Slack and his team, and she was tasked with developing a system that could keep track of patient information over time. She eventually built what would become the kernel for Epic, though it took years of urging from potential users before she would actually launch the company in 1979. In the interim, she taught college-level computer science. When Faulkner finally opened Epic for business, she did so with a small amount of cash from some colleagues at an initial valuation of $70,000. Now the company is worth many billions of dollars, though estimates of its valuation differ. Some of the original shareholders eventually sold their stock back to the company. "They got very good returns," Faulkner wrote in a testimonial. Faulkner has publicly described herself as "the accidental CEO." She told CNBC she read books and took daylong or multiday courses to learn more about management, business and leadership. But she didn't always follow their advice. "I never got an MBA, which I think is a really good thing," Faulkner said. "They would have taught me, 'Here's how you do venture capital.' We didn't do it. 'Here's how you go public.' We didn't do it. 'Here's how you do budgets.' We don't have budgets. We say, if you need it, buy it. If you don't need it, don't buy it." At the company's Users Group Meeting last year, Faulkner took the stage dressed as a swan, with a plume of feathers in her hair. Every UGM meeting has a theme — this one was "storytime." In costume, Faulkner told the thousands of health-care executives in attendance about her aversion to the public market. "Why be owned by people whose interest is primarily return of equity?" she said. She's equally opposed to selling the business, which she makes clear in the company's second commandment. That hasn't stopped other executives from trying to change her mind. In 2017, at the Digital Healthcare Innovation Summit in Boston, former General Electric CEO Jeff Immelt revealed that he'd spoken with Faulkner about acquiring Epic. Faulkner shut him down immediately. "It was a five-minute meeting — perhaps the shortest in history," Immelt said, according to a report from Healthcare IT News. The report said he'd also considered buying Cerner. Faulkner confirmed the encounter with CNBC. "Others have asked to come and persuade us, and I've heard our staff say to them, 'Just leave your car running,'" she said. Faulkner has said in testimonials that she's avoided buyers in order to remain independent and preserve Epic's unique culture, and she doesn't make acquisitions, calling them a distraction. But no matter how much she loves her company and her job, at some point, somebody else is going to have to run Epic. Faulkner has remained mum about who will be her eventual successor, other than to say that the person will have to be a software developer and a longtime Epic employee. The obvious choice, according to 10 former Epic employees who spoke with CNBC, is Sumit Rana, who was named president of the company last August. The 49-year-old joined Epic right out of college in 1998 and helped build the company's patient portal called MyChart. Rana, who was a toddler when Faulkner founded Epic, has been participating in more high-profile speaking engagements of late, including representing the company during the opening panel at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' Quality Conference in July. Faulkner declined to say whether Rana is the top contender for the job. "That's the company's business," she said. "Sumit is a wonderful employee, and he would make a good CEO, but we're not publicly announcing anything." While Faulkner doesn't say much about the company's succession plans, she hasn't been shy about her plans for her personal wealth. In 2015, she signed The Giving Pledge and agreed to donate 99% of her assets to charity, a decision that was inspired in part by a dinner she had with Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett that year. Buffett created The Giving Pledge with Bill Gates and Gates' then wife, Melinda French Gates, in 2010, encouraging the world's richest people to give away the majority of their wealth. Following Faulkner's pledge, she launched a family foundation called Roots & Wings with her husband in 2020. Roots & Wings provides grants to nonprofits that support low-income children and families. Faulkner's daughter, Shana Dall'Osto, serves as executive director of the organization. Faulkner has been selling her nonvoting shares back to the company, giving the proceeds directly to Roots & Wings. "I've never cashed a single share for myself," Faulkner told CNBC. Installing an EHR is an extremely complicated and costly project for health systems. If it doesn't go well, it could "blow up" the whole business, Dr. Robert Grossman, CEO of NYU Langone Health, told CNBC in an interview. "We bet the ranch on Epic, let's be very honest," he said. Fans of Epic say the company is fully tuned in to its customers' needs. "They don't just operate and dial in," said Michael Mayo, CEO of Baptist Health in northeast Florida. "They visit our campus. They're immersed here. They know our teams across our IT [information technology] component and our caregivers. They are in our facilities. And when we went live, which is a pretty scary time, they were in full force here." Each health system that uses Epic has a point person called a "BFF," or "best friend forever," who is available to answer questions and help solve problems. Epic doesn't outsource any incoming calls to third parties, the company says, so staff members are responsible for picking up the phone 24/7. Faulkner also makes herself easily accessible to customers, executives said. Mike Slubowski, CEO of Trinity Health, which operates 93 hospitals across 26 states, said Faulkner always answers his emails within the day, if not the hour. She holds recurring meetings with senior health-care executives by phone or video call to answer questions and talk through an organization's specific needs and ideas. Executives told CNBC that Faulkner takes copious notes and is receptive to feedback. If she doesn't have an answer, she promptly calls someone who does. "She'll stop right there and say, 'Get so-and-so on the phone,'" said Dickson, of UMass Memorial Health. "I don't know what so-and-so was doing prior to getting the call, but it's clear that when Judy calls, you drop what you're doing." Pete Durlach, corporate vice president for health and life sciences at Microsoft, said he's been in meetings with Epic staffers who have gotten these impromptu calls. Microsoft and Epic have been close partners for around two decades, a relationship that's gotten tighter as cloud and artificial intelligence technologies have advanced, he said. "People definitely answer the phone when Judy calls," Durlach said. Epic doesn't advertise or have a traditional marketing department; the company has relied heavily on word of mouth. Faulkner has also proven to be an effective salesperson. Ardent Health CEO Marty Bonick said that when he was debating whether to convert some of his hospitals to using Epic products, Faulkner ultimately helped sway him. Ardent Health owns 30 hospitals and 280 outpatient care sites across six states. When Bonick joined Ardent in 2020, he said, roughly two-thirds of Ardent's hospitals were using Epic. Bonick said he'd never worked with Epic and wanted to make sure that switching over the remainder of Ardent's hospitals would be worthwhile. Bonick said he told Faulkner that he'd heard Epic's product was expensive and difficult to implement. "She came back with a presentation that she delivered personally, and spent probably over 90 minutes," said Bonick, who was ultimately sold on the conversion. "I had to say, 'OK, time out. I've got another meeting to go to,' but she really was not watching the clock." Epic is used by all 20 of the top hospitals from the U.S. News & World Report rankings, and by the country's seven largest health plans, according to the company. Its dominance has come with plenty of controversy. Epic faces accusations of anticompetitive practices in two lawsuits from the past year. One was filed in September by data startup Particle Health, which alleges that Epic has used its EHR market power to "snuff out" competition in other emerging health-care markets. Epic said in response it would "vigorously defend itself against Particle's meritless claims." The second lawsuit was filed in May by CureIS Healthcare, a managed care services company that claims Epic has engaged in a "multi-prong scheme to destroy" CureIS' business. CureIS alleges Epic has interfered with its customer relationships, blocked access to necessary data and raised unfounded security concerns, according to a complaint. An Epic spokesperson told CNBC at the time of the filing that the company "believes in free and fair competition, and we also believe our customers are in the best position to choose the right solutions to meet their needs — whether with Epic or by adopting other products and services." Epic's competitors have also long accused the company of being territorial over its data and impeding efforts to share patient information between vendors. In a blog post last year, Oracle Executive Vice President Ken Glueck wrote that "everyone in the industry understands that Epic's CEO Judy Faulkner is the single biggest obstacle to EHR interoperability." Interoperability, in this case, refers to the exchange of electronic health data from one health-care organization to another. Since health data is siloed, stored across dozens of formats and protected by federal laws such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA, it's a complex undertaking. Over the years, startups such as Practice Fusion and DrChrono have tried to crack the EHR market with promises of greater openness and more user-friendly products, but they have never become more than niche offerings. Some failed completely. Epic promotes its own interoperability tools such as Care Everywhere and EpicCare Link, which allows customers and their affiliates to exchange data with one another. Epic also participates in larger data exchange networks. One of Epic's biggest feats in its 46 years is managing to attract high-level tech talent far away from the nation's engineering and business hubs, especially given the harsh Midwestern winters in Wisconsin. That's where Epic's headquarters comes into play. It's a campus that industry executives and former employees likened to a techie's Disney World. All 28 office buildings are themed. They're clustered into mini-campuses, with names such as Prairie Campus, Wizards Academy Campus and Storybook Campus. The offices are designed by architecture firm Cuningham, which has also worked on projects at Disney theme parks all over the world. John Cuningham, the founder of the firm, said he's worked with Faulkner for 30 years, and that she's always been very involved in the process. Epic's first campus, for instance, has more than 80 bathrooms, and Faulkner wanted to know the details of all of them. "Each one," he said. "Light fixtures, faucets, mirrors, wallpaper, tile, sinks. I mean, I was thinking, 'Oh, she'll last for 10.' She did all 85, and she still does that," he said. On Epic's grounds, a metal wizard stands in the courtyard of a castle, giant chocolate chips mark the entryway to a faux chocolate factory, and a hanging bridge leads to the company's very own treehouse. Inside a building inspired by "Alice in Wonderland," there's a slide that takes employees into a small room where everything is upside down. It's popular with visitors. "I was kind of blown away," Warner Thomas, CEO of Sutter Health, a nonprofit health system in Northern California, told CNBC about his first trip to Epic's campus. "I went down the slide, like everybody." The buildings are brimming with trinkets, ceramics, mosaics and paintings that Epic employees get to help source. Faulkner recruits a small group of volunteers to go with her to local art fairs and buy decorations for the campus. Some pieces cost thousands of dollars, according to former employees. Faulkner said she had just returned from an art fair ahead of her interview with CNBC. Despite the fantastical themes on-site, employees are tasked with very real responsibilities. Since Faulkner places such a strong emphasis on supporting her customers, she holds her staff to high standards. Most employees work in person five days a week. Hours can be long and burnout is common, former employees say. In June, The Economist analyzed 900 companies across 19 industries, and found that Epic had the worst work-life balance in the software and IT services category. Several former employees told CNBC their work at Epic was all-consuming. Epic said the average employee works between 44 and 45 hours a week, based on monthly time sheet submissions between June 2024 and June 2025. The company said its turnover rate last year was 7%. "People at Epic are dedicated and work hard," an Epic spokesperson said in a statement. Epic workers are entrusted with big projects, expected to interact directly with customers and generally take on a lot of responsibility. For some employees, that includes working alongside hospitals as they implement Epic's technology. "Some of these implementations really sucked," said Brendan Keeler, a former Epic employee who frequently blogs about the company online. "So much of the success of an implementation was just a function of the politics of the hospital." Epic recruits the vast majority of its employees straight out of college, so its staff is relatively young. All new staffers go through extensive training, including a five-hour corporate philosophy class where they're taught how to be a successful employee. Faulkner said she used to teach the class by herself but that she now has help from one or two other people. Faulkner's influence is present in every corner of Epic's campus, in its product and across much of the health-care industry. "Everybody knows Judy Faulkner," said Thomas, of Sutter Health. She's still got a lot to do. The health-care industry is reckoning with rising costs, staffing shortages, the impact of AI and the Trump administration's hefty cuts in the areas of medical science and research. And Faulkner isn't ready to quit. "It's interesting and it's challenging and it's worthwhile," Faulkner said.


Forbes
18 hours ago
- Forbes
White House Creates ‘Dynamic' Loyalty Scorecards For Over 500 U.S. Companies
Topline The White House has created 'dynamic scorecards' to measure U.S. companies' loyalty and support for President Donald Trump's agenda, a White House official confirmed to Forbes in an email Friday, revealing the grading system as it continues pressuring large firms to align with its economic and social policies. The scorecards will take into account current and future support for Trump's agenda. (Photo by) Getty Images Key Facts The White House confirmed to Forbes an Axios report that the West Wing created a scorecard rating 553 companies on how strongly they have supported President Donald Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill,' seemingly allowing the White House to quickly gauge how they will approach future conversations or interactions with the listed companies. The White House official told Forbes the dynamic scorecards 'incorporate the support of present and future administration initiatives.' In addition to considering companies' support of Trump's agenda, the scorecards also take into account companies' social media posts, press releases, video testimonials, advertisements and attendance at White House events, Axios reported, noting companies' support is ranked as strong, moderate or low. Axios cited as examples of 'good' partners United, Delta, Uber, DoorDash, AT&T, Cisco, Airlines for America and the Steel Manufacturers Association. An unnamed White House staffer told Axios the scorecards help 'us see who really goes out and helps vs. those who just come in and pay lip service,' adding the gradings can change if 'companies want to start advocating more now for the tax bill or additional administration priorities.' Get Forbes Breaking News Text Alerts: We're launching text message alerts so you'll always know the biggest stories shaping the day's headlines. Text 'Alerts' to (201) 335-0739 or sign up here. How Have Companies With Positive Grades Supported The Trump Administration? Delta and United lauded a provision within Trump's megabill calling for a $12.5 billion investment for upgrading air traffic control systems, which came months after a passenger airliner crashed into an Army helicopter at Reagan National Airport, killing 67. Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, who donated $1 million to Trump's inaugural fund, publicly supported Trump's "No Tax on Tips" policy implemented through the megabill. Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins also supported the bill and its corporate tax provisions. What Other Companies May Have Positive Grades? In addition to supporting the 'Big Beautiful Bill,' companies that have made investments into the U.S. economy may also receive positive grades. Apple is one of the largest tech companies likely in the good graces of the Trump administration, as the iPhone maker has committed $600 billion to domestic manufacturing slated to bring tens of thousands of jobs to the U.S. Amazon has made multiple multibillion-dollar investments in domestic cloud computing infrastructure, data centers and rural delivery networks, tacking on to other infrastructure and manufacturing investments from companies like NVIDIA, IBM and Johnson & Johnson. Companies like Amazon, Meta and Google have pulled back diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives targeted by the Trump administration, which could curry favor with Trump. What Companies Has Trump Criticized? Trump has had friction with some companies publicly, though it is not clear what companies have low marks, if any. Trump recently told CNBC that Bank of America and JPMorgan rejected him as a customer, adding fuel to conservatives' claims they are discriminated against by big banks. Trump also called for the ouster of Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan this month over concerns about his business connections to hundreds of Chinese businesses, saying there was 'no other solution to the problem.' Days later, following a meeting between Trump and Tan, reports surfaced that the Trump administration may be considering a stake in the tech company. Key Background Trump has applied pressure on various companies to push his opposition to DEI initiatives, encourage domestic manufacturing and infrastructure and even get Coca-Cola to bring the cane sugar version of its flagship product to the U.S. One poignant example of the administration's power came when the Federal Communications Commission approved an $8 billion merger between Paramount and Skydance Media, with Skydance vowing to end DEI considerations in hiring, promotions, development and compensation. It also agreed to produce news and entertainment programming that embodies 'a diversity of viewpoints,' according to FCC Chair Brendan Carr. Cato Institute Chair Ryan Bourne told NBC News it is unprecedented for a president to use his power to suggest CEO firings, suggest how companies should set prices and carve out 'firm-specific deals that directly pay the government.' Further Reading Intel Shares Soar After Report Says Trump Administration May Buy Equity In Tech Giant (Forbes) Apple Invests Another $100 Billion Into The U.S., Trump Says—As Shares Jump 5% (Forbes)


Forbes
20 hours ago
- Forbes
Vancouver Gears Up For WNBA Canada Game
The third edition of the WNBA Canada Game will feature the Atlanta Dream and the Seattle Storm in a regular-season matchup at Rogers Arena, marking the first WNBA regular season game held outside the United States. The event has drawn strong corporate support alongside its fan engagement efforts. Following sold out games in Toronto (2023) and Edmonton (2024), league officials expect another strong turnout. The WNBA has expanded its footprint in Canada in recent years through partnerships, grassroots programs and media distribution deals, aiming to meet growing demand from Canadian fans. A league representative told Forbes that only a few hundred tickets remain for the game, with several groups attending, including a girls' basketball team being flown into the city. Players from local women's sports teams, the Vancouver Rise and PWHL Vancouver, are also expected to make appearances. The league also announced that 15 Canadian marketing and retail partners will support the 2025 WNBA Canada Game through a mix of fan experiences, brand promotions and community programming in Vancouver. Community activations Air Canada, which has supported past Canada Games, will bring a U-17 girls' team, Team Addy, to Vancouver through its 'Fan Flight' initiative. Their trip will include a private clinic. Bell hosted a community clinic in Vancouver through its 'Bell for Better' program, and Canadian Tire Corporation partnered with the league to host a clinic for a girls' basketball team from the Tri-Cities. DoorDash will run a clinic for young women from New Heights Basketball Academy, the only female-focused basketball academy in British Columbia. Fan activations Fans arriving at Rogers Arena will find a variety of interactive experiences. Bell will hold a head-to-head skills competition called 'Shoot Your Shot!' with prizes, including custom sneakers. Campbell's crackers will host a Goldfish Tunnel photo experience outside the arena, along with sampling and giveaways. Endy will set up an interactive lounge, pillow toss and claw machine on the concourse, while Maybelline New York will launch a 'Brave Together' activation with a booth promoting mental health awareness and providing product samples. Tangerine Bank will offer pregame shooting challenges and courtside ticket giveaways. TOGETHXR events Media company TOGETHXR will host two community events during the week. On Thursday, it will partner with the Vancouver Basketball Foundation for a private clinic at Victory's Court, inviting 30 middle school girls to participate in drills and 3x3 games. Participants will receive TOGETHXR merchandise and giveaways from the Storm. On Friday, during game time, TOGETHXR will co-host a public watch party at Courtside on Main, a Vancouver basketball-themed bar. The venue will be decorated with WNBA jerseys, memorabilia, banners and flags. The first 50 attendees will receive a free 'Everyone Watches Sports' T-shirt, with on-site customization available. The event will also feature a DJ, food, drinks and giveaways celebrating Vancouver's women's sports fans.