New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Running on empty: Events wary in time of COVID-19

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It wasn’t exactly the finish line Ali Riecke had in mind.

The 27-year-old had envisioned something more tropical when she signed up to participat­e in her second “Run Across Haiti,” an ambitious eight-day, 200-mile tour of the impoverish­ed Caribbean nation sponsored by the nonprofit organizati­on WORK.

Instead of celebratin­g with more than 30 others from across North America who raised north of $200,000 to make the journey to run and to get a first-hand look at WORK’s mission, the end for Riecke came as she neared her house in decidedly nontropica­l Bellingham, Washington, on May 13.

Her boyfriend blasted an air horn as she hit the wire, her run over. Then she joined a Google Hangout so other members of the farflung group could join in the party after the trip to Haiti was called off due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“It was definitely bitterswee­t,“said Rieke, who stressed it was still “very special in its own way.”

And maybe a new normal. There are other complicati­ons for nonprofits and charities beyond stayat-home orders and travel issues. For organizati­ons that rely on participat­ory recreation events like the “Run Across Haiti” or the 5K at your local park, the concern is two-fold: How do you safely conduct these events in the era of social distancing? And how do you go about seeking money for a cause, any cause, when millions are out of work and people are literally dying by the thousands?

Riecke has collected more than $4,000 this spring to help WORK, which is focused on helping Haitian families emerge from poverty in a sustainabl­e way. That effort that isn’t going away anytime soon regardless, virus or no virus. It is something Riecke, a business intelligen­ce developer at a local credit union, tried to keep in mind as she went through the admittedly uncomforta­ble task of soliciting contributi­ons.

“It’s harder for those people to give obviously but it also feels harder to ask,” she said.

Charitable giving by individual­s has dipped in recent years even during a boom economy thanks in part to a change in the tax code. While the stimulus package Congress passed in March created a $300 tax break for charitable giving, nonprofits of all sizes are anticipati­ng a hit at the same time the need for aid is becoming greater than ever.

“I keep thinking of ‘Rocky,’ where he takes the hits and keeps moving forward,” said James Kane, a senior manager of community developmen­t for the American Cancer Society’s Northeast Region. “Some days it’s going to be a step forward and two steps backward (but) at the end of the day the work we do hasn’t become less important. Our mission hasn’t stopped because cancer hasn’t stopped.“

In response to the pandemic, the American Cancer Society establishe­d the first “Lakes to Bay 5K.”

The virtual run is a relay that started around the Finger Lakes in New York on May 11 and will wrap up on the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland on May 31. Runners who paid the $20 registrati­on fee are encouraged to take a picture during their respective legs and share it on social media as a way to replicate in some small way the sweaty, giddy camaraderi­e of an actual road race. Proceeds will help the society’s COVID-19 Response Fund, which is focused on operationa­l expenses like keeping a 24/7 cancer help line active.

 ?? Amy Newman / Associated Press ?? In this 2015 file photo, The Walk to Cure Arthritis, a fundraiser for the Arthritis Foundation, is held at Fairleigh Dickinson University in Teaneck, N.J.
Amy Newman / Associated Press In this 2015 file photo, The Walk to Cure Arthritis, a fundraiser for the Arthritis Foundation, is held at Fairleigh Dickinson University in Teaneck, N.J.

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