Austin American-Statesman

Charity makes optimal use of Sandy concert donations

- By David B. Caruso DAMON WINTER / NEW YORK TIMES

NEW YOrK — Some of the biggest names in rock ’n’ roll were on the bill for the nationally televised “12-12-12” concert benefiting victims of Superstorm Sandy, but the charity in charge of distributi­ng donations has been thinking small when it comes to doling out the $50 million-plus raised by Bruce Springstee­n, Paul McCartney, the Rolling Stones and other stars.

More than 160 organizati­ons have received shares of the Sandy relief funds collected so far by the Robin Hood Foundation, and many have been the type of small, grassroots groups that seemed to be everywhere on the devastated New York and New Jersey coastlines in the initial weeks after the storm.

Some of the grants have been small, too, but the foundation’s staff said each has been designed to make a difference on a human scale.

The list of grant recipients includes places like the Point Pleasant Presbyteri­an Church, of Point Pleasant Beach, N.J., which got $25,000 so it could install showers and beds for the stream of volunteers it has been deploying to help rebuild damaged homes.

Numerous food pantries got grants to help serve thousands of hot meals. Another group got $25,000 for making storage space available to families that need a temporary place to put salvaged possession­s.

Robin Hood gave a $100,000 grant to an operation called Rockaway Relief, hastily put together after the storm by James Brennan, a San Diego nightclub and restaurant owner who grew up on New York City’s flood-ravaged Rockaway peninsula.

In the days after the catastroph­e, Brennan hired tractor-trailers to send space heaters, water pumps and gen- erators into the disaster zone. Then, he rallied volunteers to help rip out soggy walls and furniture. Since then, the group has repaired plumbing, electrical and heating systems in close to 100 homes, he said.

“This was really way over my head,” Brennan said. “But there is so much more that these people need. I could probably rattle off 500 families right now that don’t have washer and dryers and have no way of paying for them.”

The foundation gave $150,000 to the Mennonite Disaster Service, which has been dispatchin­g home builders almost daily to Staten Island and the Rockaways all the way from Pennsylvan­ia.

Volunteers, mostly rural farmers, leave Lancaster County, Pa., at 4 a.m., put in a full day mucking out homes and hanging drywall in the city, and then make the 170-mile drive back to Pennsylvan­ia at night, MDS Executive Director Kevin King said. So far, they have worked on 117 houses. “We are looking to set up a long-term camp,” King said.

Founded in 1988 by a hedge fund manager, Paul Tudor Jones, the Robin Hood Foundation is one of New York City’s premier anti-poverty charities. It spends about $125 million per year funding a wide array of food banks, schools, medical clinics and other programs.

Still overseen and financed by big names on Wall Street, the charity is considered a pioneer in “venture philanthro­py.” The programs it funds are put through rigorous performanc­e evaluation­s, with a goal of rewarding nonprofit groups that achieve the strongest result per dollar spent.

The foundation’s executive director, David Saltzman, said it has tried to apply some of those concepts to the Sandy relief effort.

“Our general strategy is to get out to the hardesthit communitie­s ... and see with our own eyes who is doing good work, and then be able to pump money into the strongest organizati­ons doing the most needed work in the toughest-hit communitie­s,” he said. “That is the kind of grant-making you can’t do from behind a desk.”

 ??  ?? Jon Bon Jovi (left) and Bruce Springstee­n (right) perform at the ‘12-12-12’ concert at Madison Square Garden in New York City on Dec. 12. The concert raised more than $50 million.
Jon Bon Jovi (left) and Bruce Springstee­n (right) perform at the ‘12-12-12’ concert at Madison Square Garden in New York City on Dec. 12. The concert raised more than $50 million.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States