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"Many of our regular contributors, that would, say, donate a hundred dollars, are now giving us $25 dollars. People that were giving us $25 dollars or less… can’t give us anything… so we are probably at 85 – maybe 90 percent down, and that’s a considerable amount. It truly is."Wright won’t reveal how much money 85 percent is, but it was considerable enough to almost shut down operations a few weeks ago.
"…and they’re saying, 'are we going to pay for our medicine this month, or are we going to eat?' Those people who might have sent a five dollar donation last month, this month may send a dollar or nothing – because they can’t afford to."Not that larger donors aren’t hurting either, she adds:
"…so the donation that, two years ago, or after [Hurricane] Katrina, would have been a million dollars - this past year was a hundred thousand. That’s a big difference."Oxford says, however, that fewer, smaller donations don’t necessarily equal lessened services to the public.
Posted by
Dave
at
3/11/2009 02:25:00 PM
Labels: disaster centers, red cross, severe weather, tornado, twister
Posted by
Name
at
5/01/2007 03:09:00 PM
Labels: blood drive, Governor Sonny Perdue, red cross, Ware County, Waycross, wildfires