Kitty Adams Hoksbergen’s Adopt a Charger provides free or low-cost charging infrastructure at remote destinations, inspiring consumers to go all-electric, all of the time.
Growing up outside Detroit in the 1970s, Kitty Adams Hoksbergen got her first look at state and national parks from the wheel well of her parents’ 1966 Pontiac Safari station wagon. Her parents, both employees of the Detroit public school system, used their summers off to take the family — Adams Hoksbergen is the youngest of eight kids — on extended road trips. Pulling a pop-up trailer for overnight sleeping, they spent many weeks exploring the history, campgrounds, and natural wonders of the western United States.
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