** Racing Together's Karlai Warner to drive a Toyota 86 in TGRA Scholarship Series races at Queensland Raceway 4-6 August **
** Racing Together is a not-for-profit providing opportunities for indigenous kids to gain experience and employment pathways in motorsport **
** Toyota Australia is a proud supporter of Racing Together **
Australia's first and only indigenous youth motorsport team, Racing Together, will make its debut in the TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Australia (TGRA) Scholarship Series this weekend when 16-year-old Karlai Warner gets behind the wheel of a Toyota 86 as part of the Motorsport Australia Trophy Series at Queensland Raceway.
Toyota Australia is a proud supporter of Racing Together - a Queensland-based not-for-profit organisation that helps indigenous youth gain motorsport experience and employment pathways - and offered the team a drive in the series to help it further develop its skills and experience.
Karlai will drive the TGRA 86 racecar in three Scholarship Series races across the weekend while other members of the Racing Together team will be in the pit garage to assist and learn from the Neal Bates Motorsport crew who will prepare and manage the TGRA/Racing Together entry.
Racing Together was started in late 2020 by motorsport heavyweights Garry and Monique Connelly as a way to address the nearly non-existent levels of participation by Indigenous youth in motorsport.
Since then, the Racing Together team has built, prepared and raced a car in the Queensland Excel Racing Series and Mr Connelly said having a drive in the TGRA Scholarship Series was a great opportunity for the team to further develop their skills.
"Racing and helping prepare a Toyota 86 will take the team to whole new level and we're really looking forward to a weekend of thrilling racing action," he said.
"Over the past three years Karlai has developed a real talent behind the wheel and she and the team are excited about being able to put their skills to test in such a highly-regarded grassroots motorsport category.
"Our thanks go to Toyota for providing this opportunity that will help grow the skills and experience of the team and further inspire other indigenous kids to see what opportunities there are for them in motorsport," he said.
The Racing Together program invites Indigenous youth between the ages of 12 and 17 to participate in an intensive two-day education and selection program that includes driver training, mechanics, personal health and well-being, career advice and life skills.
The first program, based around Logan City in SE Queensland, saw a team of 10 selected for the inaugural Racing Together Team in 2020 with a second cohort selected through an Open Day event in Townsville last year.
Karlai was selected as part of the initial program and joined the team as a tyre technician and driving a go-kart before graduating to race the Excel, and said she was excited to put her skills to the test in the Toyota 86.
"Racing Together has taught me new skills, allowed me to race, and meet so many new people, which would never have happened if the program did not exist," Karlai said.
"It's been great racing the Excel but this opportunity to drive a Toyota 86 in a series that is recognised as a pathway to higher levels of motorsport is fantastic so I'm really looking forward some great racing," she said.
Toyota Australia Chief Marketing Officer Vin Naidoo said Toyota was proud to support Racing Together as an initiative that gave indigenous kids the chance to explore opportunities in motorsport and build their own knowledge, experience and develop teamwork and leadership skills.
"As an organisation that is unique in the world of motorsport, Racing Together is doing a fantastic job to help grow diversity in the industry and provide meaningful opportunities for these kids," Mr Naidoo said.
"We wish Karlai and the team the best of luck for what promises to be a great weekend of racing action," he said.
Racing Together is supported by directors including Supercars team principals Roland Dane (Triple Eight), and Ryan Story (DJR), and former Supercars driver Paul Morris, along with former RACQ CEO Ian Gillespie AM and Indigenous beach volleyball Olympian Taliqua Clancy.
The success of the program has seen three of the initial cohort gain employment in the automotive and motorsport industries and last year it gained global recognition receiving the inaugural Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) President's Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Award from FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem.
The award recognised outstanding commitment to diverse and inclusive practices and activities that foster equitable, sustainable, and measurable change.
The fourth round of the 2023 TGRA Scholarship Series will run as part of the Motorsport Australia Trophy Series at Queensland Raceway from 4-6 August with the final round at the 2023 Master Blast at Sydney Motorsport Park from 1-3 September.