What really bugs me — for a number of reasons — is when they bring their ambulances and fire trucks and park them in the median with the emergency lights flashing non-stop. That whole practice is wrong on many levels.
Of course, the alternative for many of these is higher taxes, but I guess that would be “Reds under the bed” for many.
Many years ago I decided to only donate to “human” charities, so no dogs, cats or endangered pandas. When I got married, my wife agreed and we also agreed that people who stick their collecting tins - real or electronic - in our faces get now’t.
We don’t contribute 10% but we do give what we can spare to a carefully selected group of charities. They have to benefit people and they have to have reasonably low overheads.
Unrelated, but that reminds me of something. Quite a few years back, I was on the freeway about to exit. As I got closer to my exit, I could see quite a bit of traffic backed up and within a few minutes it was backed quite a ways onto the freeway itself. Once I could see the end of the ramp, I saw a police car, either with someone simply pulled over or a minor accident that wasn’t really in the way (or something similarly minor, I don’t remember exactly). The problem was that the squad’s lights were on, which locked the traffic lights with a red light facing the exit. Eventually I called the local PD and got a ‘what am I supposed to do about it’ attitude from whoever I spoke to. “You need to contact that officer and have them shut their lights off or move their car or something because this isn’t safe now that the right lane of the freeway is at a stand still”. And a few minutes later the cop, who probably didn’t even know it was happening, shut off his lights and traffic started moving again.
With a lot of them, at least WRT this part of the discussion, I think the issue is more that they’re standing in the road doing it. I mentioned above that my store will let them use our parking lot to do fund raisers and people love it. People will come just to donate money and see the fire trucks or buy a brat and some corn on the cob.
I never donate to any cause at the till. They get to use those amounts for tax deductions. In the end you’re losing taxes that would have contributed to your community by giving them the deduction on your contribution.
I don’t know how much of it comes from donations at the register but Firehouse Subs does give grants to fire depts. We’ve benefited in that we put in for one & (eventually, took a couple of tries) got a grant to purchase specific equipment to make us safer & better able to do our jobs.
We don’t do it but when you’re operating on a shoestring budget it helps …& having the apparatus there, with lights on both makes it safer as people tend to slow down & proves that whomever is asking for funds is legit.
I don’t typically give as I donate enough (time) to where I volunteer but I don’t begrudge other companies for doing such. I just wonder how much they bring in compared to in the past as a lot of people don’t carry cash anymore? They should probably tape a QR code to the side of the boot if they want to maximize income
I give EXCLUSIVELY to animal charities, zoos, wildlife rehabilitation, but only locally. I don’t send money to any organizations sending letters from NYC headquarters.
If I’m asked to round up or donate or buy cookies, I have no problem saying, ‘Not today, sorry.’ and move on.
Here in Oregon the return on bottles and cans is 10 cents apiece. Instead of turning mine in at the grocery store I put them in a trailer for the local animal welfare people. It isn’t that much, but probably comes to around $100 a year.
I also donate to the Dornbecker children’s hospital in Portland. Butt that’s about it. I have no problem saying no to everybody else, but it does bug me a little.
I’ve noticed on Facebook now that you can donate to a charity for someone’s birthday. That annoys me. I hope that dies out soon.
The first year my kid was in public school I got a begging email from the school once a week or more. I was really dreading years more of that. Of course the begging came from the same address as actually important messages, so blocking or unsubscribing was not possible. Even after starting the year with a donation, the messages still kept coming.
Perhaps people complained, I don’t know, but since then it has been much, much better. The school has one main fundraiser per year, and we’d receive emails about that, but otherwise the begging has stopped.
And as others have mentioned, by not irritating me, I’ve been willing to give more to the school in the form of a donation to the classroom at the start of the year, and then another during the big fund drive.
So I was gonna ask what the dope was on these. Specifically the ones that come up on the credit card machine when you pay at big supermarkets.
I’ve been told that this is a scam, specifically that while it is a donation to the charity listed the supermarket gets to claim your donation against their taxes, so by doing it you are helping a huge multinational supermarket conglomerate to avoid taxes.
I know a couple of pubs in central London that have a prompt to offer a tip in their EPOS system (and quite often the staff tap the “No” box before presenting the terminal to me - maybe they recognise me as a mean old git). But I’ve not met it any other time.
On the other hand it’s common for shops to have out a collecting box in charities’ flag day seasons, particularly remembrance poppies for the British Legion, and supermarkets have out collection points for food banks. But it’s not pushed or on some sort of opt-out basis, just something else by the till. And there are TV adverts for all sorts of charities but since most of my watching is stuff I’ve recorded, so I can skip the ad breaks (mean old git again).
The most annoying for me so far was when my granddaughter sent out the annual request for donations for their HS music groups who travel to competitions. I have no problem with donating for that, but the website that handles the donations has a tip line! It’s set to automatically default to 20%. A tip for fucking what, exactly? And you have to be careful if you want to change it, because if you think you can just type a zero without first erasing the 20%, you will end up tipping 200%! I have to wonder how many more people would donate if it wasn’t for the insult of them asking for a tip.
Jay_Z, It’s fine for charitable organizations to seek out the few with the most money to spare. It’s politically impractical for the government to do much more than has been done on that basis. The police exist to keep the people who need the money the most from seeking out the few who have the most money to spare. At least now they get to do it on public property.
It doesn’t work. It’s a viscous cycle (specifically 90 weight gear oil that smells like a vault toilet). If I’ve never heard of you, you’re not getting any money. If the first time I hear about you I get annoyed, your not getting any money.
I have looked at several sites and the consensus seems to be that companies that collect donations through jars at their establishments cannot directly claim tax deductions for these contributions. The donations are not part of their income, so they do not qualify for tax write-offs. However, businesses can still engage in corporate philanthropy by making direct donations to qualified charitable organizations and claiming deductions based on those contributions.