City execs clamp down on sham charity fund drives
>> Thursday, December 19, 2013
By Ramon
Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- The profiteering days - and
nights - of organizers of fund-raisers for their personal
profit but masquerading as humanitarian and civic projects
will soon be over, at least here in Baguio.
Stung by the
proliferation of fun-runs, concerts and other solicitation events labeled
“for-a-cause” but turn out to be “for-a-cost” to line the pockets of the
organizers, the city social welfare and development office is set to endorse to
mayor Mauricio Domogan an executive order regulating any form of fund-raising
here.
The executive order
being drafted, according to city social welfare and development officer Betty
Fangasan, is in accordance with Presidential Decree No. 1564, also known
as the Solicitation Permit Law and the Local Government Code giving local
government executives the authority to issue permits for fund-raising
activities.
The solicitation
permit requirement is intended to distinguish and protect well-meaning
fund-raising activities from profit-oriented concerts, fun-runs and other
solicitations announced as intended for indigent patients or civic projects
that remain anonymous or non-existent.
Fangasan said all
forms of solicitation, including those intended as support to victims of
Typhoon Yolanda and other calamities, will have to be covered by a permit to be
issued by the city mayor.
For caroling
activities this yuletide, Fangasan said the permit is issued by the punong
barangay of the community where the driver is to be conducted. If it covers
more than one barangay, the city mayor issues the permit.
“The number of
individuals, organizations and corporations in the city who seek donations and
voluntary contributions have increased over the past years, thereby
(necessitating their regulation) to obviate illegal fund drives and to protect
the general public,” the draft of the executive order pointed out.
Fangasan added that
issuances of laws and administrative orders regarding solicitations sometimes
create confusion and conflict at the regional and national level, prompting the
need for the city to issue guidelines.
Pending the issuance
of the executive order, all individuals and groups who are into soliciting
donations for Typhoon Yolanda victims will be enjoined to submit a detailed
report on the cash and goods they have collected and the identities of the
calamity victims or beneficiaries of these.
“We are also asking
them to apply for permits through our office so that their project can be
monitored and their legitimacy and reputation upheld and protected,” Fangasan
said.
The permit requirement
was agreed upon during a meeting with mayor Domogan and city councilor Peter
Fianza, who was earlier designated as acting chair of the city relief
operations for the typhoon victims.
The draft guidelines
limit the administrative expense from the proceeds to 15 percent of the total
gross income, with the remaining 85 percent to go to the project to be
undertaken by groups. In case the fund-raising activity is solely through
voluntary contributions, the administrative expenses shall not be more than 10
percent of the total collection.
That provision,
Fangasan stressed, protects the charitable or civic purpose of a fun-raiser,
given complaints from would-be beneficiaries of concerts and fun-runs that they
actually received nothing or only a pittance of the collections as the
organizers had jacked up administrative expenses, sometimes to the point of
declaring loss.
The draft also enjoins
media outlets to air or publish only projects which are already covered by
permits issued by the mayor and to ask the organizers to submit, also for
publication or announcement, a detailed report on the collections and disbursements
of the fund drive they undertook. The report will include donors and
their corresponding contributions, together with the identities and personal
circumstances of the beneficiaries and the contributions they received.
Some previous fun-runs
and concerts were announced for the benefit of patients when these re launched
but nothing was heard from the organizers on how much was collected and
how much and to whom the proceeds were distributed after the race or the
show.
The mayor’s permit,
Fangasan said, may also be the basis for police officers and volunteer
communication and support groups to respond to requests for them to assist in
the conduct of legitimate fund-drives-for-a-cause.
Meanwhile, a staff
member of the city mayor’s office also clarified that mayor Domogan has not
issued any permit for any solicitation activity pending the issuance of the
guidelines.
Ryan Mangusan, the
mayor’s personal secretary, announced this in the wake of reports reaching the
office that some solicitors are out seeking contributions using fake permits.
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