Friday, May 24, 2013

Charities and Special Funds for Tragedies


Because I’m no longer employed in a leadership capacity with a charity organization, I can say things that I would in the past refrain from saying.  But for the sake of my friends and colleagues still in charity work and for the public at large, here I go…  Many charity organizations are simply not designed to effectively handle large influxes of money for unexpected tragedies, nor should we expect them to be unless we pay them for that service.

What brings this to mind for me now is the news in northeast Ohio regarding families of the victims of the Chardon School shooting who are suing the United Way of Greater Cleveland and its Geauga County Chapter for allegedly misdirecting donated “Chardon Healing” funds.  The goal of this article is not to promote an opinion on this specific incident but to speak in general about the dynamic of crisis fundraising and response.  There are many cases in which charity organizations have come under criticism for not directing donated funds as expected by the masses of contributors.

Let me premise this article by saying that my thoughts and prayers are with the families of the victims of the Chardon School shooting.  I remember that day well and how affected I was by it, paralyzed for days at the tragedy of it all.  I do indeed hope that those families receive all the assistance they need.

Often when a crisis occurs, people will respond by donating money to help the victims involved.  I continue to be moved by the gracious generosity of many to help others in need.  It is a special thing to witness and it gives me reason to stay optimistic about the human experience. 

Handling such financial outpouring, however, to help in the most effective manner is a big hairy challenge for the charity organization that accepts the responsibility.  Truth be told, charity organizations are simply expected to do so even though they know it will be impossible to satisfy everyone’s expectations.  They do so because their stakeholders expect them to and because it would be a public relations debacle if they said no thanks, not this time.  I give charities credit for making the attempt.  It is after-all their purpose in the community to help.

Now, from a manager’s standpoint, I want to stress to readers the intracasies and considerations involved.  A terrible tragedy has happened in the community and people are hurting.  Emotions are running high and money is pouring in from many individuals, each of whom has a slightly different notion of how the money should be used.  The charity is expected to distribute all of the money to the right people very quickly even though some affects of most tragedies are long lasting.  And here’s the clincher, no one wants to pay for the managerial expertise necessary to facilitate the giving – every dollar must go directly to the victims!

The charity must still assign personnel to facilitate the distribution in an orderly manner.  This involves fielding hundreds, if not thousands, of phone calls and emails, creating an application process, interviewing many affected individuals and families, coordinating services, accounting for who gets how much and why and so much more.  This type of work is more involved than just cutting a few checks and calling it a day.

In the case of the Chardon School shooting, if memory serves, almost a million dollars was collected in a very short time (a lot of money to be sure, but not so much compared to other tragedies and fundraising efforts such as a hurricane relief fund that might affect tens of thousands of people).  Imagine being responsible for the charitable help to tens of thousands of people.  Will the charity hire additional employees to do this very involved work?  Probably not.  In fact, nonprofit organizations are notorious for giving already overworked employees more responsibility, especially if they don’t have additional funds to pay for more help.  I beg the question, should we expect the charity to hire additional employees to do a thorough job if we don’t allow for even a small amount of our charity dollar to be used in this manner?  Well, you might say, I’ve donated to this charity in the past and they should use that money to do this work.  That sounds quite rational except for the fact that every dollar given in the past is immediately budgeted towards already existing needs in the community.  Most charities don’t have additional resources set aside to facilitate unexpected tragedies and if they do, those dollars are minimal.

Generally speaking, it is common for charities to receive financial contributions year ‘round that are earmarked by well meaning contributors to be used 100% for the direct needs of clients (no overhead expenses).  This is an understandable desire, as people don’t want their contribution to be used for such boring stuff as staff salary, snow removal for the agency parking lot or office expenses but it is an expectation that is frankly unrealistic.  Charities have expenses like any other organization and unless we acknowledge this fact we’ll be doomed to position even the best managed charities to fail when we need them to do their best work on our behalf – responding to a crisis.

The public rightfully does not want charity organizations to “profit” from tragedies.  Trust me, they don’t.  In fact, they are put at great risk when we expect them to deliver quickly and in a big way with absolutely no additional funding.  Not only might they unintentionally mismanage the crises but their other ongoing programs may suffer as well because resources are surely being pulled from them to do the urgent unfunded work at hand.

Would it be so unpalatable to the public for a small percentage of the donated funds to be used for oversight expenses, say 3% or 5%?  I, for one, would not mind if the charity used a small amount of my donated funds to get the job done well.  There are other considerations that need to be addressed too, such as how to set up special funds with clearer parameters in order to minimize contributor confusion and angst but that is content for another article.

For now, I would simply ask readers to give their charity organizations the benefit of the doubt.  They are doing the best they can with limited resources.  It is an especially difficult task to administer a special fund after a tragedy without the necessary dollars to manage it effectively.  And to my colleagues in charity organizations I would recommend, it’s time to communicate in a better, more straightforward way what you can and cannot do for the community – and how much it will reasonably cost!