charity

Last Wednesday, three people were arrested in Orlando for giving food to homeless people in a local park. They violated city regulations that require “groups to obtain a permit and limits each group to two permits per year for each park within a 2-mile radius of City Hall.” The rules apply to events that give food to over 25 people; the arrestees fed about 40 people.

Their charitable work could cost them each a $500 fine and up to six months in jail. All three are affiliated with a group called Food Not Bombs that regularly gives meals to homeless people. The Wednesday event that led to the arrests was a deliberate resistance to the ordinance. Hopefully they will succeed in overturning it; the last thing government should do when people try to help each other is get in the way.

People often refer to their charitable efforts as “giving back.” This is a misuse of language; what did they take? No, they are simply giving. Here’s an excerpt from a classic Don Boudreaux letter:

Dear Ritz-Carlton:

Thanks for your e-mail celebrating your and your employees’ participation in “Give Back Getaways” — activities in which you and your employees (along with some of your customers) “give back to the community.”

Have you taken something that doesn’t belong to you? If so, by all means give it back! (But please don’t applaud yourself for doing so.)

Read the whole thing.

Richard Morrison, Jeremy Lott and the American Spectator’s Joseph Lawler assemble to bring you Episode 77 of the LibertyWeek podcast. We explore the Massachusetts Senate race, Google vs. China on web censorship, the debate over global warming in Detroit, the cost of doing business in Venezuela and the inspiring philanthropic response to the humanitarian crisis in Haiti.

There are more  developments on the charity front-not exactly related to the budget issue I posted on previously–but interesting nonetheless.  Apparently, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy (do not miss this link!)-NCRP, wants to work with legislators to push this agenda.  At first glance, its goals laid out here seem harmless enough:

It attempts to answer the questions: What differentiates an exemplary foundation from the rest of its peers? What can foundations do to improve its relevance to nonprofits, the economically and socially underserved Americans and society as a whole?

Of course, all things are not always what they seem.  Here is a critique of the report in by Heather Higgins of Philanthropy Roundtable:

The full text of the report came out March 3, but NCRP has been circulating a 15-page summary that already makes clear that this paper is not only replete with flawed logic, poor economic understanding and selective data, but is most disingenuously an Orwellian world of deliberate redefinition, where benign and admirable words are used but have meanings very different from common understanding.

Why? Because this report is a tool to a larger end. The document says it’s to be used to “criticize those who do not measure up.” Moreover, “Policymakers may find the criteria valuable when considering regulations or legislation … and the media will find the resource helpful for reporting.”

Back up a minute. NCRP has been around for 30 years. Its Web site homepage features “Happy Birthday, Saul Alinsky,” for the radical-left union and community organizer. Though self-styled as an independent “watchdog” of foundations, the reality is that NCRP doesn’t care about charity broadly–indeed it’s quite contemptuous of large swaths of it. It only cares about encouraging ever-greater flows of funds to the groups it deems worthy and truly serving of the public good, chief among which would be “social justice” activists like ACORN, an NCRP member.

In another article by an affiliate group critical of the report:

However, despite its name, The Alliance for Charitable Reform believes these benchmarks have nothing to do with measuring effectiveness. In fact, the natural consequence of these benchmarks will be to reduce the scope and diversity of the foundation sector to one that serves a more narrow set of highly politicized interests…

…”On average, foundation assets have dropped 20-40% and The New York Times reports an unusual number of charities filing for bankruptcy. It is incomprehensible that the NCRP is proposing criteria that could further ravage the charitable sector,”…

Again, I leave with more questions: Is there an effort out there to ‘de-fund’ or seriously reduce the funding of certain private non-profit charities, and ensure only select ones remain well-funded?   If so, why? I have no idea, it may be just a misunderstanding of intentions, but it sure seems fishy.

Just what is up with the section of the Obama administration’s budget which plans to ‘phase-out’ tax deductions for charitable giving?  Frankly this is a little unnerving to someone who works for a nonprofit organization like I do, I have heard similar sentiments among those from all parts of the political spectrum.  To this news, there are those who would say: it only affects those  “rich” folks making over $200K/year.  To which I say: So what?  Furthermore, the ‘rich’ are responsible for a good deal of charity (more research here)–why reduce their capacity even further than increased income taxes and a slow economy will already?  Others will argue that Obama’s continuation and expansion of Bush administration policy giving taxpayer money to faith-based programs justifies and cushions any reductions groups may experience under the proposed phase out.  To which I say: They should not be getting taxpayer money in the first place.

I am generally against speculating on people’s motives when it comes to policy, I would rataher point out how said policy is not good.  However, one cannot help but figure that with this in place it will be much more difficult for non-profit organizations who do not take government money to operate effectively.  What if that is the whole point? What if the reduction or outright elimination of privately-funded and privately run charitable groups is exactly the intent here?  I will not go that far, yet.  But I wouldn’t be surprised.

Some people seem to think that having a mind for business and profit means you must be some kind of money-grubbing miser. Far from it, according to new research featured at the Insider Online. It seems that entrepreneurs give more generously to charitable causes, at every level of income, than non-entrepreneurs. Go figure.


Read the whole paper here.