Seasonal & Holidays

GivingTuesday: 5 Farmington Nonprofits That Could Use Your Help

'GivingTuesday' is Nov. 29 and several local nonprofits could use some financial aid.

FARMINGTON, CT — If you’re like many Connecticut residents, you’ll spend many of the last few days of November immersed in consumerism, buying this and that for your friends and family, and even indulging yourself.

GivingTuesday on Nov. 29 is a chance to turn your attention to local nonprofit groups seeing an alarming decline in small gifts.

Since 2012, nonprofits, community and grassroots groups, and mutual aid networks worldwide have used GivingTuesday to galvanize fundraising, rally volunteers and add momentum to their causes.

Find out what's happening in Farmingtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Local nonprofits are having a particularly tough time this year. The number of donors shrunk by 7 percent in the first half of 2022, largely due to a “collapse” in the number of small-gift supporters, according to the most recent GivingTuesday quarterly fundraising report.

Donors giving $100 or less were down 17 percent in the first six months of the year and 8 percent fewer donors made gifts of $101 to $500, according to the report.

Find out what's happening in Farmingtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

You likely have your own favorite causes among the nonprofits, community and grassroots groups and mutual aid organizations that address local needs here in Farmington.

GivingTuesday is locally led in more than 240 U.S. communities, networks and coalitions.

GivingTuesday communities in Connecticut include Farmington, West Hartford and Southington.

Some worthy causes here in Farmington include:

  • The Petit Family Foundation, which aims to raise funds to foster the education of young people, especially those in the sciences; to improve the lives of those affected by chronic illnesses and affected by violence.
  • The Farmington Foundation, Inc., a low-interest student loan fund that is open to all students going to college as an undergraduate.
  • The Farmington Village Green And Library Assoc., which aims to is to enhance the quality of life and preserve the cultural history of Farmington through the financial support and operation of the Farmington and Barney libraries, Stanley-Whitman House Museum, the village green and Memento Mori Cemetery.
  • Voices of Hope Inc., which aims to foster culture and social action against hate, bigotry, intolerance and indifference.
  • The Farmington Land Trust Inc., which protects open space in the Town of Farmington through acquisition of open space land, stewardship of acquired land, education of the public about the importance of open space and advocacy that ensures protection of Farmington's natural resources.

For more Farmington-based nonprofits, click on this link.

There are some bright spots in the fundraising report, released by the Fundraising Effectiveness Project, a research effort of the Association of Fundraising Professionals Foundation for Philanthropy and GivingTuesday.

Importantly, although the pool of donors shrunk in the first half of 2022, the dollars contributed increased 6.2 percent as major donors stepped up. At the same time, the increase in large donor contributions was outpaced by second-quarter inflation rate of about 8.5 percent.

“Recaptured donors” — people who at one point had given to an organization, but not in the most recent reporting period — grew by 6.3 percent.

That group likely includes people who supported a charity in a surge of pandemic giving in 2020, as well as those who paused their charitable donations during the first two years of the pandemic and gave again this year, according to Lori Gusdorf, executive vice president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals group, said in a news release.

The key takeaway for charities is to stay in contact with donors and include them in fundraising pitches, regardless of when they last gave, Gusdorf said.

The report “underlines the importance of employing targeted strategies for retaining this key donor segment, especially in times of economic volatility, when donors are more frequently evaluating their financial commitments,” she said.

GivingTuesday was created in New York City in 2012 with a simple goal: to encourage people to do good. Over the past nine years, the idea has grown into the global movement it is today.

The goal of GivingTuesday is “radical generosity” — the concept that the suffering of others should be as intolerable to us as our own suffering, according to the movement’s website.

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