Jump to content

Recommended Posts

We have recently had a number of mums and kids knocking on the door asking for donations for charity walks and requesting the money immediately saying they live far away. While I think this is a great way of raising money for charity, I am concerned that some of these walks cannot be found online or with the registered charity.

Does anyone know of any websites on which fundraising activities can be confirmed so that all donations reach their intended target?

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/38332-charity-walks/
Share on other sites

AnotherFineMess Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> We have recently had a number of mums and kids

> knocking on the door asking for donations for

> charity walks and requesting the money immediately

> saying they live far away. While I think this is a

> great way of raising money for charity, I am

> concerned that some of these walks cannot be found

> online or with the registered charity.

> Does anyone know of any websites on which

> fundraising activities can be confirmed so that

> all donations reach their intended target?


I just ask which website they're using for donations and explain it's because I'll only give money if I can Gift Aid it (I absolutely hate handing cash to charity whilst still paying the taxman).

I've found it quite rate for a legitimate sponsored event etc not to use a 'giving' site nowadays.(Eg Justgiving - yes it is a private company but it's fees come from a relatively small proportion of the tax refund so the charities are much better off than if you just hand over money at the doorstep)

For small charities like schools etc, Just Giving and the likes can still take a big chunk of your cash - Just Giving charges ?18 a month regardless of whether you are actively collecting in that month or not. So not all charities will use them.


If you're not sure if it's legit or not, ask them which school/nursery/group etc they're collecting for - then if it is a local one, let the school etc know that kids are coming around the doors. It may be well intentioned but I'm sure it isn't what schools would be expecting kids to do.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I am trying to find out about people's experiences of the 4+ and 7+ assessments. I am a teacher and have a wealth of experience tutoring for theses assessments (including my own son), but it's always good to keep on top of things as they always make tweaks to them. TIA! 
    • "You have no idea why"   To be fair Sue, it's blindingly obvious to anyone who has a conversation with anyone who isn't a Corbyn supporter. And even some who liked Corbyn (like me initially) found him somewhat flaky even at his most popular But let's say you are right and I have NO idea why anybody might not vote for him. They still didn't vote for him. He lost two elections. The second one badly (and strongly predicted but the stubborn old goat wouldn't budge so we we were stuck with Johnson and another 3 million PMs in the 5 years that followed) So even with ZERO evidence, we have our eyes and ears and brains But we do have evidence   https://yougov.co.uk/politics/articles/27022-their-own-words-why-voters-abandoned-labour
    • As I said, it was my understanding. I worded it very carefully. I didn't/don't know for sure, so clearly not a fact. And hardly an "opinion", which is something completely different. You have no idea what reason anybody might have had for not voting for him (unless you can point to some opinion poll results which actually asked people?)
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...