TORRANCE, Calif. -

The public votes are in and the winners haved been determined.

Toyota on Tuesday released the names of the final 25 winners in its 100 Cars for Good program, a national philanthropic effort awarding 100 cars to 100 U.S. nonprofits, over the course of 100 consecutive days.

The winners were selected each day through public Facebook voting. With five nonprofits profiled on the site daily, the organization with the most public votes each day won a new Toyota vehicle, while each of the four daily runners-up received a $1,000 cash grant from Toyota, the company explained.

The total offerings of the project are 100 new Toyota vehicles and $400,000 in cash grants, awarded to non-profits across the country offering a variety of services including education, safety, animal welfare, food banks and human services for children and adults.

“It is rewarding and inspiring to see the response Toyota’s 100 Cars for Good program has received from the public,” said Jim Lentz, president and chief executive officer of Toyota Motor Sales, USA.

“Over the course of two years, this program has awarded more than $7 million in vehicles and cash grants to local nonprofit organizations across the country, as well as helping to raise awareness to hundreds more. We are very pleased to have the opportunity to help these worthwhile organizations broaden their impact in communities all across the nation, and we thank the public for their support in determining the winners," he continued.

Winning organizations are offered their choice of a Camry Hybrid, Highlander SUV, Prius v Hybrid, Sienna minivan, Sienna Mobility or Tundra full-sized pickup. Each vehicle also comes with a six-year, 100,000-mile powertrain warranty via Toyota Financial Services.

The 500 finalists, from which the 100 winners were ultimately selected, were certified by an independent panel of judges who Toyota said are experts in the fields of philanthropy and corporate social responsibility.

The final set of 25 winners in the 100 Cars for Good program are:

SPCA Cincinnati, Cincinnati
Cumberland Valley Animal Shelter, Chambersburg, Pa.
Nikkei Concerns, Seattle
McDowell County Commission on Aging, Welch, W.Va.
Grahamtastic Connection, Springvale, Maine
Golden Ears Hearing Dogs, University Place, Wash.
C.U.R.E. Foundation, Rensselaer, N.Y.
Teach for America-Delta, Oxford, Miss.
Keystone Paralyzed Veterans, Pittsburgh
Wolf Conservation Center, South Salem, N.Y.
Putnam County SPCA, Brewster, N.Y.
PTSD Foundation of America, Houston
Intervention Services-Village, Maitland, Fla.
Scott County Humane Society, Georgetown, Ky.
Northwoods Habitat for Humanity, Bemidji, Minn.
Animal Rescue Foundation, Terryville, Conn.
Emergency Shelter Program, Hayward, Calif.
Abused Women’s Aid in Crisis, Anchorage, Alaska
The Domestic Violence Shelter Inc., Mansfield, Ohio
Mississippi Gulf Coast YMCA, Ocean Springs, Miss.
Victory Reins, Peotone, Ill.
American Children’s Society Inc., Marlboro, N.J.
Edwards Center Inc., Aloha, Ore.
Family Promise of Grand Rapids, Grand Rapids, Mich.
The Albany Damien Center in Albany, N.Y.
Sanctuary, Inc. in Hopkinsville, Ky.