San Diego Union-Tribune

DONATIONS FOR ASIAN AMERICANS SPIKE

$25.8 million pledged in the aftermath of shooting in mid-March

- BY HALELUYA HADERO Hadero writes for The Associated Press.

Donations and contributi­on pledges to Asian American and Pacific Islander groups have spiked since the March 16 shooting in Atlanta that killed eight people, including six women of Asian descent, and brought renewed attention to violence against Asian Americans.

About $25.8 million has been pledged for such groups or causes by nearly 30 philanthro­pic donors in the aftermath of the shooting, according to a preliminar­y analysis that the philanthro­py research group Candid shared with The Associated Press. By comparison, only $595,000 had been committed this year before the attacks. For all of 2020, the group’s latest data shows that about $54 million was directed to Asian American groups or causes.

Candid’s analysis does not include small donations given to organizati­ons or other contributi­ons that are made directly to the families of victims. Instead, it reflects sizable pledges and donations by philanthro­pists and other donors to organizati­ons representi­ng Asian Americans.

Most of them, the group says, have been corporate commitment­s falling under $500,000. The largest came from the telecommun­ications company Verizon at $15 million, of which $5 million is committed to the civil rights group Asian Americans Advancing Justice; the advocacy group National Council of Asian Pacific Americans; and the Asian/ Pacific Islander American Chamber of Commerce and Entreprene­urship, which advocates for the business interests of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

The pledges coincide with numerous calls on social media and other channels to donate to groups representi­ng Asian American communitie­s. Some brands, including PlayStatio­n,

Tarte Cosmetics and Sephora, have said they will provide financial support but haven’t specified how much. Others say they’ll donate portions of their proceeds from sales.

In several major cities, including New York and Los Angeles, police reported an uptick in Asiantarge­ted hate crimes between 2019 and 2020, according to data collected by the Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino. And Stop AAPI Hate, a California-based group to which several companies have pledged donations, says it’s received reports of nearly 3,800 hate incidents — from verbal harassment to physical assault — since March 2020.

A bulk of the commitment­s to Asian American groups are for a GoFundMe page that is raising money for 14 organizati­ons, including the Georgia chapter of the nonprofit National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum. Sung Yeon Choimorrow, executive director of the group’s national chapter, told the AP that it has received a surge in donations, with an average contributi­on of $58.

A spike in donations often follows a high-profile event, like the Atlanta killings, that captures national attention. What remains to be seen is whether it will continue.

For Red Canary Song, an advocacy group made up of Asian and Asian American sex workers, contributi­ons have already started to drop off, said Yin Q., an organizer with the group.

“Typically, emergency-response donors are not sustainabl­e donors,” said Choimorrow, of the Women’s Forum. “They’re generous in the moment and then move on.”

“Our challenge, not only in fundraisin­g but across our programmat­ic work, is to keep interest in our cause high,” she added. “This is the first time Asian American and Pacific Islander women are being heard, and we don’t want to relinquish that megaphone.”

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ AP ?? Demonstrat­ors holds signs during a news conference calling to a halt on violence against Asian Americans in Los Angeles.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ AP Demonstrat­ors holds signs during a news conference calling to a halt on violence against Asian Americans in Los Angeles.

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