St. Jude's is a great charity for pediatric cancer. |
Check Charity Navigator Top Ten lists: http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=topten
Think about charities that are working hard on causes that you care about, or those that have helped your family, etc. |
CURE- Citizens Untied Reseach in Epilesy.
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SCAN (stop child abuse now) of NOVA. I live in DC & still support it, as it does great work to prevent child abuse (parenting classes, etc) and works with lots of foster children, teen moms, etc to stop the cycles of teen pregnancy, lack if education, etc. The charity has a great record of helping several thousand kids. Very small full time staff, most of the work is done by volunteers (but very well organized), so a huge percentage of each dollar donated ends up helping people vs some charities I looked at where it goes to running the organization. |
Brady Center. |
Habitat for Humanity
Heifer Project Red Cross local Arts groups Local: Bread for the City (DC) House of Ruth Our Daily Bread (Fairfax County) - small, well run, trying some new inovative ways to help people out of poverty and stay there. Despite its name it is not religious. Provides emergency food and money BUT also provides financial literacy. Not to be confused with the daily prayer group. FACETS Doorways for Women |
One of the 2012-2013 charities is the DC Youth Orchestra Program. Fabulous program! You should see on Saturdays what's going on at Eastern HS on Capitol Hill. Amazing. Hundreds of kids of all stripes, all levels, aged 4-19 taking lessons on about 20 instruments, grouped by ability. Something for everyone. |
Agree with Charity Navigator. It offers helpful guidance.
I try to think about what causes are important to me, and then donate to a mix of large and small organizations I've also tried to find organizations that do international work but need to do a better job of that. Some faves in no particular order: Planned Parenthood American Foundation for Suicide Prevention Some sort of large local food bank, like So Others Might Eat Doctors Without Borders I like small environmental groups, like the Chesapeake Bay Trust Human Rights Campaign Brady Center (gun violence) ACLU Committee to Protect Journalists |
CrisisLink, a local non profit, serving the community with a 24/7/365 crisis and suicide prevention hotline.
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We will donate to orgs that we know/have worked with such as:
-N Street Village. fabulous place, I volunteered there for a number of years -Salvation Army. I worked with them (not on their main mission stuff but peripherals). God love 'em, they are crazy, but have their hearts and minds in the right place and you can bet your money is actually going to do some good. The stuff they put their officers/members through is crazy and they are definitely NOT in it for money! Also our church and Heifer |
+1. Knew a woman who went through this once upon a time. Saved her life. |
Our church
A Wider Circle (transitional services for battered women and their families |
FYI they spend about 30% of their revenue on admin and fundraising (mostly fundraising). I think a lot of the smaller local charities people have mentioned spend more like 10% on fundraising and admin costs. |
I understand that they have a higher rate of admin and fundraising - but the thing with St. Jude's that hits me is the data. The progress that has been made in pediatric cancer treatment directly related to St. Judes is incredible. If you know any child who has cancer - they probably use somethng that came out of St. Jude's. |
Yes! These are very well run, and do so much great work. And I would like to add Doctors without Borders. |