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For nearly 20 years, Charitable Choices has been helping charities jointly
promote themselves in workplace fund-raising campaigns, especially the
federal government's Combined Federal Campaign (CFC).
Each year we publish four photo-filled, easy-to-use guides to charities
that are eligible to receive gifts through the CFC. In 2005, we printed and
distributed more than 830,000 guides!
Our goal has always been to give charities --
including smaller, less-established charities -- a very cost effective
way to promote their work. Both in our guides and on our website, small charities get the
same opportunity as much larger charities to tell you about what they do
and why it’s important. We also give smaller charities a very low rate
for being in our California guide or in the guide we distribute in
The Washington Post (plus, by being in any or our guides, a charity
also gets two pages in our website for a full year). To learn about
being part of Charitable Choices guides and website, go to:
www.CharityChoices.com/joinus.asp.
Our goal has also been to provide federal employees and many other people
a simple way to learn about a broad variety of trustworthy
charities. Every charity in our guides and on our website has met
the federal charity drive’s 10 accountability standards, such as
not having excessive fund-raising and administrative costs. We tell you
exactly how much each charity spends on administration and fund
raising.
As a result, you can focus on other important questions about a charity,
such as which needs it is addressing, how it is addressing these needs
and what it is accomplishing. We have asked each charity on this site to
answer six straight-forward questions that can help donors develop a
deeper understanding of how a charity will be using their donations.
“What I like about your website is that I can learn what these
charities really do with my money,” commented Julia Collins of
Boyds, MD.
Our guides and website make it easy for
donors to find charities doing work they want to support. You can search for charities by category (“Health,”
“Military/Veterans Services,” “Environmental Protection,” etc.). You
can also search by where a charity works: internationally, nationally or
locally (for now, in the DC metropolitan area and in Los Angeles, San
Francisco and San Diego).
Our guides and website also make it easy for donors to compare charities.
They don't have to wade through dozens of separate appeals for help.
Several surveys of federal employees have shown that our guides are both
useful and quite effective.
“We bring the Charitable Choices guides home from work and use them
to teach our teenage children about philanthropic giving,”
commented the Jordan family of suburban Washington, DC.
The Charitable Choices Website
We began our website in 1997 as a way to provide more information about the
charities in our guides. It is an additional, free service for these
charities.
We wanted our website to be a way for people to really learn about the
charities. We didn't want to simply post each charity's basic
description and PR materials. To do this, we have asked each charity to
answer six questions about its work, such as “How can I be sure that you
will use my money wisely and won’t waste it?”
You learn a lot about a charity when you read the answers to the
questions," commented one user of our site, Linda Failey. "I've read
some of these charities' annual reports and newsletters over the years,
but I got much more out of those questions."
How To Give To Charities on This Website
When you find a charity that you want to support, on its page in
our website you will find a link that will take you to that charity’s
online donation page. There you can make a donation that will go
directly to that charity. Charitable Choices will receive no part of
your donation.
You can also mail a check to any of these charities to that
charity’s address (which we provide). Again, we receive no part of
these donations.
If you are a federal employee or member of the military, you
can give to these charities through the Combined Federal Campaign.
We have provided each charity’s 4-digit “CFC” number. We also explain
why it makes sense to give through the CFC.
If you are an employee of a company that has a United Way
campaign, you can give to any of these charities even if they are
not United Way member agencies through “donor option.” You will need the
charity’s name and address (which we provide).
We have also tried to make our website useful in other ways:
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People in the DC area, for example, can find a list of charities that will
accept donations for a wide variety of items, such as furniture,
cars, computers, clothes, etc.
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Anyone can use our 5-step guide for checking out any charity, or our
information about how much you will save in taxes by making a
charitable donation, or our advice about responding to a natural
disaster.
If you have questions or comments about our guides and website, we
welcome them:
info@CharityChoices.com.
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