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Anyone else irritated by all the adverts asking for £3 a month to help………

(204 Posts)
Poppyred Thu 16-Dec-21 17:23:49

Just that really….. just feel that it’s never ending.

HunnyBunny Sat 18-Dec-21 10:51:59

We had a DD set up for a monthly amount to the RSPCA. When my husband came out of work, we had to cancel.
We had no end of phone calls from them asking why we had cancelled, couldn’t you just afford a bit less to give, and on and on it went. It was annoying to think that the the money we had donated had gone to pay for the phone calls!

I had another one at the door. This time for a childrens charity. The man wanted me to set up a DD there and then. I asked him for some literature to read through before committing, he refused. I had to decline. He then reminded me about what the charity was about, really putting pressure on me. I had to shut the door in the end.

mrswoo Sat 18-Dec-21 10:51:17

My father always gave to Sightsavers. When he died we asked for donations to be to them in lieu of flowers. Quite a considerable amount was raised. We never received an acknowledgement from the charity and for some time afterwards letters were sent to my deceased dad asking why his direct debit had been cancelled and asking if he would consider setting up another one.
Needless to say that is one charity I would never give to.

philoheart Sat 18-Dec-21 10:50:17

More and more charities are asking for higher amounts which a lot of people simply can't afford. What I would like to see are the celebrities tell us how much of their money they give to to the charity they are appealing for. Remember Bob Geldof urging us to give money while keeping his hand in his pocket?

Janburry Sat 18-Dec-21 10:48:20

I've recently moved into a bungalow and the amount of begging letters the previous tenant recieved was eye-watering the poor lady was harrased by every charity l could imagine and some I didn't know existed. Initially l was sending back as not at this address but now l just bin them

Cossy Sat 18-Dec-21 10:47:49

Not at all irritated no, just always so grateful that my family & I don’t need these charities !

davo Sat 18-Dec-21 10:46:29

I do not think that all these charities need my money when they can afford to pay their Executive Officers £200,000 plus per annum - more than the PM receives

Dabi Sat 18-Dec-21 10:45:06

Before anyone gets financially involved with a charity - especially a heart tugger hmm- you should ask them for disclosure of salaries paid to the CEO of said organisation. You would be shocked how much is skimmed off of donations and into pockets of those at the top. Charities are very lucrative 'non profit' organisations. Let charity begin at home.

Bucks Sat 18-Dec-21 10:44:04

I don’t mind donating but I find the absolute waste of money sending through the post month after month. U have to give your address for gift aid and then hey presto all your donation is swallowed up in mail shots. I do give but stop nagging me.

TanaMa Sat 18-Dec-21 10:43:51

I prefer to give to smaller charities where I can see how the money is spent, rather than those with numerous titled 'bigwigs' pocketting large sums just for giving their name on the top of the page. Don't see them out selling raffle tickets etc! Also feel the so called celebs voicing the adverts for the bigger charities, don't do it for nothing! If I gave to everyone who begged I would need a begging bowl of my own!

fordk4 Sat 18-Dec-21 10:41:11

I am fed up with charities for people abroad they must think we have very deep pockets with oaps living on the bread lie who worked all their lives do we help them no wake up uk look after pur own people first

SecondhandRose Sat 18-Dec-21 10:36:14

I have a problem with the super rich doing charity songs and the super rich that preach socialist values.

The £3 a month thing I think is a good idea except do you homework to see which are the richest charities and which spend a lot of the donations of their fancy offices.

BBbevan Fri 17-Dec-21 17:02:11

There’s one keeps popping up at the top of the page WWF I believe.

grannypiper Fri 17-Dec-21 16:19:38

Yes i do find those ads irritating. I refuse point blank to give to any charity that has a CEO on a ludicrous wage or can afford tv adverts. This year i have donated to Marys Meals, also local charity that delivers Christmas presents to any child in need, I have donated a Sweatshirt to a charity that collects "named" items that are given to teenagers to stop them being bullied because they don't have the "right" clothes. Next week i shall buy a few bags of groceries to leave on the doorstep of a family that i know are struggling and 4 Blythswood boxes have been filled. My usual hamper will be sent to the staff in the High dependency neonatal unit that saved my darling Grandchilds life.

silversurf Fri 17-Dec-21 16:13:45

I give to my selected charities. But not to ones that go to war torn countries (much as the ordinary people deserve it) as much of the money goes into the coffers of the warlords. Also the ‘sponsor a girl’ to stop child marriage and FGM. These practises are perpetuated by the child’s parents and I don’t see how that can be stopped without their governments intervening.

Calistemon Fri 17-Dec-21 15:23:39

Just had someone at the door selling or wanting me to sign up to a charity.
I don't like cold callers so said 'No thank you' politely but he was very rude. I feel quite shaken

MissAdventure Fri 17-Dec-21 15:13:52

The red cross was a bloody nuisance with both my mum and my daughter, to the extent that my girl was afraid to answer her phone in case it was them, pressurising her to increase her donation.

When I answered, they were really rude to me when I asked them to give it a rest. angry

Charleygirl5 Fri 17-Dec-21 15:08:17

I give a monthly donation to Battersea Dogs Home and London Air Ambulance. They are really good, I receive an email thanking me for my support but never asking for a penny extra.

I give a one/off amount annually to CPL, no problems there and ditto to the Macular Society. I also do voluntary work for the latter but as already mentioned they are never off my back looking for more money. The latter employ a lot of staff and I doubt if any are on minimum wage so I have a feeling the vast majority of money goes there and not on research.

Urmstongran Fri 17-Dec-21 14:19:40

Grandmabatty

I used to give every month to the Red Cross until I started getting regular phone calls trying to get me to give more each month. It got to the point that I was getting numerous calls every day. I cancelled my direct debit and will never give to charity in that way again. It's a form of harassment.

I suppose it depends on the charity GrandmaBatty. I’ve given a monthly direct debit to The Children’s Society for over 20 years now. I requested no pamphlets or correspondence in the mail thank you for which they have kept their promise. Over the years I have voluntarily increased the amount of the direct debit.

NanaandGrampy Fri 17-Dec-21 14:12:27

My real issue with these ads is exactly how much of the money they are asking for goes to the 'cause' and how much is swallowed up by marketing costs and salaried staff?

Whilst I understand that these are all , no doubt, worthy causes that need to raise funds I dislike the volume that are on TV - even if the tv time was free , the making of the advert was surely not.

Nannashirlz Fri 17-Dec-21 13:25:09

Yes and most of them are overseas. I don’t give to any but I do give them my old stuff when I’ve finished with to high street charities it and my buy stuff from them and end of day who’s got the money to just give away now adays. I’ve just bought a toy for the toy app for kids here. I also buy my poppy every year.

larry5 Fri 17-Dec-21 12:57:15

When we were away in the summer we saw a RNLI display. We would have given a one off donation but they wouldn't take it because they were not allowed to handle cash so they only wanted to get us to sign up to a direct debit so they did not receive any money from us.

I wonder how many more people would have made a one off donation that day who just walked away.

lovebeigecardigans1955 Fri 17-Dec-21 12:39:58

That's terrible Sparklefizz - I think if you were to set up a direct debit for £5 each month you'd pretty soon be asked if you could increase it to £7, etc, etc which is why I prefer to give the occasional payment to the charities I favour.

Over the last few weeks I've had cold calls from a local charity which has a lottery which I've declined and blocked but still these calls come through on a slightly different number. If I give I want it to be because I've chosen to do so, not 'guilt-tripped' into it.

poshpaws Fri 17-Dec-21 12:39:03

EllanVannin

I can't understand these charities that have prize-giving occasions. Prizes are invariably monetary which doesn't make sense to me at all. Surely they need all the funds they can get, not give away hundreds in prize money ?

EllanVannin so far as I understand it, the charities sell enough tickets that they do in fact come out with a profit.

However it doesn't sit right with me when they pay people to cold call on their behalf, not sure why I feel that way, maybe I'm just cynical.

I always like to check what a charity's income and outgoings are, and I won't give to any who pay obscene amounts of money to their executive staff. A couple of examples:

The RSPCA’s Chief Executive is paid a total cash payment
(including base pay and car allowance) of £150,007.

Cancer Research: CEO, Michelle Mitchell, was paid £215,500 base salary between April 2020 and March 2021.

I give to a chosen few charities, like the Fistula Clinic; Soi Dog; RNLI; Air Ambulance and some small UK ones and when I get a cold call just say that, and add that I cannot afford to contribute to any others, say goodbye politely and put the phone down while they're still talking.

If they persistently call, I ask them to remove me from their calling list - which I believe they're then legally obliged to do. It works for me, anyway.

annsixty Fri 17-Dec-21 12:30:16

When my H died and people asked about flowers or donations I just said to donate to charity of their choice.
Someone donated to their local hospital and was asked for my name and address so they could write to me informing me of their donation.
Within weeks they were writing to me asking me to sign up and donate to them.
I received magazines, notifications of fund raising events etc.
I ignored them all but what an insensitive time to start this.
Firstly it reminded me how they came to be getting in touch but secondly my income had reduced significantly.

Oldwoman70 Fri 17-Dec-21 12:09:19

When my mother (who lives in another country) had a stroke I contacted the Stroke Association to ask for information, which they sent me. As a thank you I made a generous one off donation. After that I began receiving magazines and letters asking for more money for several years - I am sure the cost of soliciting more money from me almost equalled the sum I had donated.

There are several local charities I support and before donating to any other charity I always look up how much the people running it are paid - it used to be a surprise, not any more.