Dayton Daily News

UNITED WAY CUTS FUNDS FOR BIG BROTHERS BIG SISTERS

Funding shift prompts campaign to keep organizati­on afloat.

- By Lawrence Budd Staff Writer

The Big Brothers Big Sisters program in Warren County has launched a fund-raising campaign in part in response to a shifting of funding by the United Way of Warren County to cover anticipate­d needs resulting from coronaviru­s cuts and restrictio­ns.

“These cuts, though, combined with canceled events, are putting the county’s Big Brothers Big Sisters programs in jeopardy,” Deb Haas, marketing and public relations manager for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Cincinnati, said. “The campaign follows the eliminatio­n of funding to our agency from the Warren County United Way.

“During this health crisis, the WC United Way understand­ably, needs to focus on agencies that

provide food and shelter,” Haas added.

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Cincinnati said the Warren County cut was $55,000 of an $80,000 shortfall.

“The other lost funds represent events in the county that we have had to cancel,” Haas said Friday.

Big Brothers Big Sisters is among programs whose funding has been suspended indefinite­ly, rather than cut, “so we can react to whatever these needs are,” United Way of Warren County CEO Aaron Reid said.

Reid said Big Brothers Big Sisters was overstatin­g the shortfall and indicated Big Brothers Big Sister of Greater Cincinnati faced only a 2.4 percent budget cut due to the suspension by United Way of Warren County.

“This is a time when organizati­ons need to be able to take care of themselves,” Reid said. “All sectors across the country are facing cuts, dramatic changes to the way they operate.”

Reid said he and the non-profit’s board decided to suspend those recipients deemed non-essential in light of more basic needs caused by the coronaviru­s response. American Red Cross training programs were among others to lose funding.

“It was a very difficult process,” Reid said. “Nobody knows what those emergent needs are going to be.”

Reid said non-profits could apply for support from the United Way of Warren County’s new regional recovery fund.

Since 2014, Jim Bennett, a Big Brother in Warren County, said he and his “Little” have formed an important relationsh­ip.

“He looks at the world with different opportunit­ies,” Bennett said. “I just hope this program can be preserved.”

The program serves 70 children and has three staff members in Warren County.

Kathy List, CEO of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Cincinnati, appealed to Warren County residents and business to make up the deficit in funding for schooland community-based programs.

“There is an urgent need for funding to keep serving children in Warren County. Our program is essential in providing children with a lifeline through the establishe­d, trusted relationsh­ip they have with their Big Brother or Sister,” List said in the release.

Contributi­ons are already coming in.

Joe Dominiack, co-owner of a Tropical Smoothie Café in Mason, said a company started with his wife, Cultivate People, had given $500.

“We had a Little since he was 12,” said Dominiack, about to open a second location in West Chester and a Big Brother for more than 20 years.

“It is more than just spending a day with a child, this is helping to open doors and provide resources that will benefit them for a lifetime,” Dominiack said.

 ??  ?? Jim Bennett and Jamason, his “Little Brother,” have been matched since 2014. “i just hope this program can be preserved,” Jim says.
Jim Bennett and Jamason, his “Little Brother,” have been matched since 2014. “i just hope this program can be preserved,” Jim says.

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