The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Americans’ trust in charity steady amid pandemic, poll finds

- By Dan Parks

After years of declines, Americans’ trust in civil-rights and community-action charities increased in 2020, according to a new study, which also found that trust in charities overall held steady as millions more Americans came to rely on nonprofits amid the pandemic.

The share of people with high trust in civil-rights and community-action groups fell steadily from 25% in 2017 to 13% in 2019 before reversing course in 2020 to 16%, according to the annual “Profiles in Charity Trust and Giving” survey, conducted by Give.org, a charity evaluator affiliated with the Better Business Bureau.

Elvia Castro, a manager at Give.org and one of the authors of the report, said the racial justice movement almost certainly is behind the shift in Americans’ trust for organizati­ons that they perceive as being in favor of social change.

Sam Graddy, diversity giving officer at Jackson Laboratory, said donors may see civil rights organizati­ons as problem-solvers in an area that has generated tremendous public attention in recent years.

“I can see where trust would go up in those types of organizati­ons. They seem to be about the solution,” said Graddy, who works to persuade donors to support researcher­s from diverse background­s and to support scholarshi­p on what’s behind health disparitie­s between whites and people of color. Overall, 18% of people surveyed in 2020 place high trust in charities, a figure that has held steady from 17% to 19% since 2017. At the same time, fewer people say trust in charities is highly important to their giving decisions, declining from 73% in 2017 to 63% in 2020.

As for the broader finding of a persistent lack of faith in nonprofits generally, Graddy said it likely reflects societal trends of heightened suspicions of people toward their fellow Americans.

“There’s just not a whole lot of trust in society,” he said.

Leslie Lenkowsky, a professor emeritus of public affairs and philanthro­pic studies at Indiana University, said even though more people have relied on charities in recent years, those experience­s were not necessaril­y positive. Long lines at food banks, for example, may have affected people’s perception­s of charities, he said.

Lenkowsky also noted that trust is a difficult thing for researcher­s to measure, and he cited a previous survey by Independen­t Sector, in partnershi­p with Edelman Data & Intelligen­ce, that found the largest share of people fall somewhere in middle when asked about trust in nonprofits.

The Give.org report is based on a survey conducted in December 2020 of more than 2,100 U.S. adults. It has a margin of error of 2%.

The study pointed to a key finding for fundraiser­s: People of color are more likely to be open to charitable solicitati­ons. For example, 22% of African Americans and Hispanics said they would like to be approached more by charities to give, compared with 9% of whites. The figure was 11% for Asian Americans.

An additional 28% of African Americans, Hispanics, and Asian Americans said they might be willing to give more if approached, compared with 16% of whites.

There were also big generation­al divides, with 24% of millennial­s saying they would like to be approached more often, compared with 2% of people 77 or older and baby boomers.

Lenkowsky said it is important for fundraiser­s to note another statistic in the report: Fifty-five percent of respondent­s don’t want to hear more often from charities.

“A lot of people in this report do not want their door darkened by more solicitati­ons,” Lenkowsky said.

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