Formaldehyde
Both Fair And Balanced
There are literally thousands of so-called charities which are really nothing but scams. Many of them use for-profit telemarketers who eat up 90% or more of the donated amount. Many times these paid telemarketers are part of the operation itself.
The top 50 worst offenders collected $1.35B last year, and only $380M went to the charities themselves. Of that amount only $49M was actually paid in direct cash aid, which is less than 5% of the funds collected. Some of them, like the American Foundation for Chidren with AIDs, National Narcotic Officers Associations Coalition, Operation Lookout National Center For Missing Youth, and Project Cure actually paid no money at all to victims or their families whom they were claiming to help.
When these charities are finally banned from practicing in one state, they merely move to another state or no longer fleece the residents of that particular state. The state of Florida has a law which states that ex-cons who have been convicted of a crime involving money cannot be telemarketers. The majority of employees of one telemarketing firm are ex-cons, so they supposedly just handle out-of-state calls to circumvent the law.
Extensive Tampa Bay Times Coverage
List of 50 worst charities
It seems like a very simple problem to fix. Ban any charity from using paid telemarketing services, car giveawaways by for-profit companies, or other similar scams. Enforce minimum disbursement levels to beneficiaries. Establish maximum salaries based on the size of the charity. Thoroughly audit their books to assure that money isn't being siphoned off to family members and others. But most importantly have more than a handful of people in each state to closely monitor the more than one million charities in the US.
The top 50 worst offenders collected $1.35B last year, and only $380M went to the charities themselves. Of that amount only $49M was actually paid in direct cash aid, which is less than 5% of the funds collected. Some of them, like the American Foundation for Chidren with AIDs, National Narcotic Officers Associations Coalition, Operation Lookout National Center For Missing Youth, and Project Cure actually paid no money at all to victims or their families whom they were claiming to help.
When these charities are finally banned from practicing in one state, they merely move to another state or no longer fleece the residents of that particular state. The state of Florida has a law which states that ex-cons who have been convicted of a crime involving money cannot be telemarketers. The majority of employees of one telemarketing firm are ex-cons, so they supposedly just handle out-of-state calls to circumvent the law.
Extensive Tampa Bay Times Coverage
List of 50 worst charities
It seems like a very simple problem to fix. Ban any charity from using paid telemarketing services, car giveawaways by for-profit companies, or other similar scams. Enforce minimum disbursement levels to beneficiaries. Establish maximum salaries based on the size of the charity. Thoroughly audit their books to assure that money isn't being siphoned off to family members and others. But most importantly have more than a handful of people in each state to closely monitor the more than one million charities in the US.