Keeping its promise, German sports carmaker Porsche, donated the award of legal costs in its winning battle against former Mayor, Ken Livingstone, and his plans to introduce a daily charge of £25 per driver in central London, to Skidz, a charity devoted to training at-risk young people in mechanical skills and maintenance. A cheque for £375,000 was presented by Andy Goss, Managing Director of Porsche GB, to Steve Godfrey, Project Director at Skidz, at a ceremony at Porsche Center Mayfair, in the heart of London.
"We were always confident that our legal case was right and that we would win in the end," said Andy Goss, Managing Director of Porsche Cars Great Britain. "The proposal was unfair, disproportionate and we had evidence that this change would actually increase emissions in London. We were delighted to be awarded the legal fees involved in this case, and for us it instantly became clear that this money should be invested back into the capital in a positive way."
Goss added; "By taking the benefits from tackling one major London issue, we now feel we can help tackle another, which is helping to give young people a focus and a chance to channel themselves in a positive direction. In Skidz, we believe that we have found a fantastic charity to help us deliver on our commitment."



























Aston Martin Cygnet Based on Toyota iQ Mini
2010 Citroen C3: Official Photos and Details
Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 Spyder: 55 High-Res Photos
Ford's Agency Tries to Lure Blogs into Writing About its Cars
Dodge May Sell Rebadged Alfas in the US, Europe Could Get Dodge Models as Alfas
Chinese Sports Cars Mixes Audi R8 and Ferrari Styling Traits
Honda Confirms European MUGEN Civic Type R 240HP
2010 Toyota Land Cruiser Facelift Photo Appear on the Web
2010 Grand Bentley Snapped at Factory
Alfa Romeo Milano Fully Revealed in Factory Photos
Ferrari Testing California with HGTE Sport Package at the 'Ring?
New Dacia SUV Scooped without Camouflage
Suzuki Kizashi Sedan Scooped Inside and Out
2011 BMW M5: Twin Turbo Sports Sedan Spied
2010 Hyundai Tucson Compact SUV Spied Again
Kia's Small MPV Snapped by Reader at the Czech Republic
VIDEO: Citroen GT Supercar on the Streets of London
VIDEO: 2010 Alfa Romeo Milano Caught on Film
VIDEO: 20-Minutes of Porsche Panamera
VIDEO: Fiat 500C Convertible Hits the Road
VIDEO: Chevy Volt Pre-Production Test Drive
2010 Mitsubishi Pajero SUV with New Diesel Engine
New MINI One D 90HP Returns 60mpg - 3.9lt/100km
New Chevy Camaro Confirmed for Europe
BMW X1 Priced Around 10 Percent Lower than X3 SUV
Seat Ibiza Bocanegra: Updated Album with 60 Pics
2010 Daewoo Matiz Spied Undisguised in Korea
Report: GM-Opel May Ditch Magna for Belgium's RJH
BMW X1 SUV: 183 Photos, Video and all the Official Details
Facelifted Peugeot 207 Photo Album
Mature Tuning: IND BMW M3 Dakar Yellow Project
Senner Releases Sport Package for Audi A5 Coupe
Sportec Presents Supersonic 858HP Porsche 911 Turbo
Mcchip-ing the Fiat 500 Diesel
Jaguar XKR Goodwood Special with 530HP V8
Alfa Romeo MiTi with GTA-Like Aero Kit by Lester
Nissan 370Z Yellow Limited Edition Model
Acura Integra Coupe with Porsche 911 Front and Supra Bodykit
Lancia Hyena: Zagato's Delta HF Intergale Coupe
Offbeat: Vauxhall Corsa Themed Roller Skates
Nissan GT-R Enters Guinness Book of World Records
VW Forms Polo's Name with 260 Cars
Custom Built Hummer H1 is one Freaky Creation
Audi's Goodwood Scuplture with Suspended R8 and Auto Union Cars
Our Spy Photographer's Personal Car...
Have an Interesting Story you'd like to Share, Scooped a Prototype or a Test Car? Mail it to us!




Good work Porsche!
Now, please come to Stockholm, Sweden and help us sue the politics who said, in national TV, that "i promise that if we (the social democrats) are elected, we will NOT give you congestion charges".
A few years later, boom! Tolls of up to 8$ a day.
Good on you, Porsche. It's nice to see them doing something positive from the money they were awarded. It's especially coincidental at a time when Transport for London as announced they'll be introducing a bicycle hire scheme in 2010 - giving something back to the people, rather than trying to take something away with congestion charging.