By
BRETT ZONGKER, Associated Press Writer Brett Zongker, Associated Press Writer - Sun
Oct 17, 12:26 pm ET
WASHINGTON - A new ranking of the nation's 400 biggest charities shows donations dropped
by 11 percent overall last year as the Great Recession ended - the worst
decline in 20 years since the Chronicle of Philanthropy began keeping a tally.
The
Philanthropy 400 report to be released Monday shows such familiar names as the
United Way and the Salvation Army, both based near Washington, continue to
dominate the ranking, despite the 2009 declines. The survey accounts for $68.6
billion in charitable contributions.
An
earlier report by the Giving USA Foundation found overall charitable giving
declined 3.6 percent last year. That report included giving to private
foundations and to smaller charities, while the Chronicle's survey only
includes top charities raising money from the public.
"It
shows that charities are really having a tough time, and this is some of the
most successful charities in the United States," Chronicle Editor Stacy
Palmer said. "Usually bigger charities are more resilient, so that's the
part that is still surprising."
The
top charities may have taken such a hit as giving shifted to smaller, local
groups and because people gave less money to arts and cultural groups, Palmer
said. Plus, even though the recession has officially ended, unemployment
remains high at nearly 10 percent nationally and the economy continues to
sputter.
The
Salvation Army, based in Alexandria, Va., maintained its No. 2 ranking after
the United Way, with $1.7 billion in contributions, despite a decline of 8.4
percent.
"The
only caveat is our Christmas was extraordinary," said Major George Hood,
the Salvation Army's head of community relations. The group's red kettle
campaign raised a record $130 million in 2008 and surpassed that in 2009 to
raise $139 million.
"The
American public really dug deep during the holiday season, and in the balance
of the year really cut back in what they gave to charity," he said.
The
Salvation Army also is grappling with how to lure younger donors and is ramping
up its digital video marketing and social networking strategies, as it has
previously relied on an older demographic that lived through World War I and
World War II.
Last
week, the Salvation Army signed its first agreement to receive donations by
text message, which it will roll out this Christmas season, Hood said. Text
donations have risen in popularity in the past year for groups like the Red
Cross, which encouraged such donations after the earthquake that devastated
Haiti in January. Officials have also looked at creating avatars or online
games to engage younger donors.
"It's
so far out for a Victorian-era conservative organization like us ... kinda
freaky," Hood said. "But if we can find a way to cost effectively
leverage technology, we're game."
Only
four charities in the top 10 reported increased contributions over last year,
including Alexandria, Va.-based Catholic Charities USA, which reported a 66
percent jump. For many, that growth has been driven by donated goods rather
than cash. For instance, the Stamford, Conn.-based AmeriCares Foundation grew
the fastest in 20 years to be ranked No. 4, up from 86th in 1991. Its
contributions were mostly food, medicine and other goods, not money.
Feed
the Children, based in Oklahoma City, and Food for the Poor, based in Coconut
Creek, Fla., also grew dramatically in the past two decades. Atlanta-based
Habitat for Humanity had some of the largest growth in cash donations over that
time.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101017/ap_on_bi_ge/us_top400_charities