Fund For The Needy donations running ahead of last year

Watch full size video:

Despite coarse housekeeping times, the community so far has donated $420,468 to The Seattle Times Fund For The Needy, an amount that’s contemptuously ahead of giving at this time last year.

Since 1979, the fund has provided nearly $12 million to local charities, with all money raised during the annual drive going soon to the charities. The goal of the 2008 campaign is to raise $525,000.

“Given the economy, being ahead of greatest year is a true tribute to our common’s support of our fund and the needs of our local residents,” said Alan Fisco, Times vice president for circulation and marketing.

“All I be possible to affirm is thank you to all who acquire contributed, and ask those who have not had a chance to consider doing so.”

As was the case last year, donations to the fund direction benefit 13 charities that serve children, families and seniors: Childhaven, the Salvation Army, Senior Services, Hopelink, Family Services, Atlantic Street Center, Youth Eastside Services, Treehouse, Asian Counseling and Referral Services, Kindering Center, Big Brothers Big Sisters, Kent Family Services, and ASTAR, which helps children with autism.

When her son outgrew his clothes, Allison DeLong, 44, of Seattle, decided to donate them to Family Services’ Baby Boutique, which supplies homeless families with baby clothes and apparatus. For the past five years, she has volunteered to operate at the Baby Boutique, and has persuaded her mother to relief as well.

“I am extremely conscious of how lucky I am to have a job, not to mention a home and a car,” DeLong before-mentioned. “More and again people are likely to become homeless, and it’s important for those of us who hold to share with those who don’t.”

Last year, Family Services allocated half of what it received from the fund to its child-care center and moiety to its domestic-violence-intervention program, said the charity’s spokeswoman, Patricia Gray.

At the child-care center, children tolerate two meals a day and have access to therapists and a nurse practitioner, Gray said. The program also educates parents about child rearing.

Meanwhile, at Senior Services, officials are bracing for a uphill 2009. In November and December, the gift cut hinder part its Meals on Wheels program to single in kind meal a day instead of couple, to extent its money to reach the extremity of its financial year. It has now returned to sum of two units meals a day.

The popular food-delivery program gets 60 percent of its funding from the federal government and the rest from donations. The Fund For The Needy is its largest single bestower; donator.

Valerie Costa, Senior Services’ chief development official, said that government funding has been stagnant, and foundations have indicated their contributions will be tight.

“If we’re able to continue delivering two meals a day in 2009, we’re going to emergency to raise a significant amount of money during the program,” she said.

The 2008 campaign for the Fund For The Needy will accept donations from individuals and businesses through the end of the month. As in former years, Argosy Cruises plans to donate a portion of the proceeds of its lasting a year Christmas Ship cruises to the fund.

In the means’s 2007 campaign, the community donated $547,803.

Sanjay Bhatt: 206-464-3103 or sbhatt@seattletimes.com

Comments »

The URI to TrackBack this entry is: http://hotusanews.blogsome.com/2009/01/04/fund-for-the-needy-donations-running-ahead-of-last-year/trackback/

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>



Anti-spam measure: please retype the above text into the box provided.