Foundation Tracks Philanthropy’s Response to Gulf Coast Disasters

The Foundation Center, a nonprofit organization that gathers and analyzes information on U.S. philanthropy, has released “Snapshot of Philanthropy’s Response to the Gulf Coast Hurricanes,” an overview of corporate and foundation response to the disasters. Data for this report comes from information provided by the institutional donors through press releases, web postings and other public announcements. The Center will be tracking foundation and corporate giving over the next several years and will publish extensive detailed analysis at the end of 2006 and 2007.


Advertisement


Thousands of executives with financial reporting responsibilities use the Comperio on-line library to access the type of information and interpretive guidance PricewaterhouseCoopers' own professional audit staff use around the world. Key content areas include guidance from the FASB, EITF, PCAOB, SEC, and others as well as PwC's interpretive guidance. Get more information and sign up for a complimentary 30-day trial.


The Foundation Center’s snapshot shows that total private giving reached $2.96 billion as of December 13, 2005, of which 17 percent, $490.2 million, came from institutions -- corporations, corporate foundations, community and public foundations and independent and family foundations. The institutional share of the total is likely to increase, the report says, as additional information on foundation and corporate giving is announced.

Corporate and corporate foundations donated $351,457,948, 71 percent of the total institutional response. Among the largest donors were Starkey Laboratories, which gave $25 million to the Starkey Help America Hearing Project, a business recovery program; Wal-Mart; the Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati (FHLBC) and Freddie Mac. Wal-Mart directed its donation, $17 million, to the American Red Cross, the Bush-Clinton Katrina Fund, and the Salvation Army. The FHLBC contributed $15 million to establish the Katrina Housing Assistance Fund. Freddie Mac donated $10 million to the American Red Cross; to the National Housing Trust Enterprise Preservation Corporation, to provide services to families now living in Dallas and Houston; and to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, to locate children and reunite families. The report notes that several major corporations eliminated their caps on corporate matching to increase their donations.

The largest award came from the independent Lilly Foundation, which donated $30 million to the American Red Cross. The W.K. Kellogg Foundation, another independent, gave $15 million to various relief efforts.

Not included in the total are corporate in-kind donations. The report cites Office Depot’s contribution of $17 million of supplies and the contents of five stores; and General Electric’s $10 million in medical devices, power generation equipment and water purification equipment. Comcast gave $10 million and Cox Enterprises, $8 million in advertising space and IBM gave $3.2 million in technology and services. The Foundation Center has tracked 101 corporations that have given an additional $195.7 of in-kind donations for immediate relief and recovery.

The American Red Cross (ARC) was by far the largest named recipient of contributions in response to the gulf storms. ARC received $156.3 million, or 31.9 percent of designated support. The ARC says, according to the Foundation Center report, that the majority of their overall support, which will exceed $2 billion, will provide emergency financial assistance to victims. Almost 38 percent of institutional contributions have not yet been assigned, either because a recipient has not been designated, or because the amounts pledged to several organizations have not been broken down.

The Foundation Center is using the same model to track corporate and foundation response to the Gulf Coast hurricanes that they used to track institutional giving after the September 11, 2001 attack. The report notes that by comparison, as of December 2004, three years after the attack, foundation and corporate response totaled $1.1 billion.

Voice of the Editor

Even though any accounting auditor would tell you it seems like there are an awful lot of tax accountants out there, surely one-third of the country isn't made up of tax preparers, so it's rather startling news to learn that one-third of Americans like to do their taxes. Who knew?
ADVERTISEMENT

This Week on AccountingWEB

Bill Walter of Gross, Mendelsohn & Associates and Harold Gaar of TravisWolff LLP weigh in on mobile technology use while employees are at work.
WestArk RSVP and Fayette County Community Action Agency – organizations that received grant funding through the IRS Tax Counseling for the Elderly (TCE) program – spoke with AccountingWEB about how they assist senior citizens in their communities.
CPA Robert Raiola, who heads the Sports & Entertainment Group of Fazio, Mannuzza, Roche, Tankel, LaPilusa, LLC, talks NFL player income taxes with AccountingWEB.
Retiring KPMG Centennial Professor of Accounting at the University of Texas at Austin McCombs School of Business Robert May, PhD talks with AccountingWEB about his rewarding forty-three-year career.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT