michelel72: (CM-Garcia-Downcast)
michelel72 ([personal profile] michelel72) wrote2011-03-16 10:21 pm

Charity advice for Japan relief

I'm looking to donate funds for rescue and support efforts in Japan. I'd prefer to donate as directly as possible (rather than to an aggregator who funds an aggregator who funds ...), and ideally I'd also donate to organizations with a good track record of using a high percentage of donations for programs rather than overhead. There's only so much one can find in short order, though, and I'm pretty sure swiftness is urgent.

I'm currently looking at this promotion for animal rescue and perhaps Peace Winds via Mercy Corps for people (though I've donated to Doctors without Borders before and would be willing to do so again here).

If anyone has any information about these agencies, good or bad, I'd appreciate word; highly recommended alternates would also be welcome. (No religious charities, please, and not the American Red Cross.) I know GreaterGood.org is collecting and paying credit card transaction fees, for example, but all they say is they pass on donations to "affiliated charities". And I'd love to bid over at the fandom auctions (chibi art by [livejournal.com profile] gnine!) or offer a donation in exchange for something like intensive Photoshop collage tutoring, but I'll be donating anyway and much sooner, so I don't want to outbid someone and thereby "cost" some charity that donation.

I'll update this post when I actually donate, no later than Saturday or probably before.

Update: DWB/MSF are very good, as I mentioned, as is Partners in Health; for this event, though, I'm choosing Direct Relief International's Japan Relief and Recovery Fund. Direct Relief is highly rated at Charity Navigator and has been recommended via multiple different paths. For animals, I'm looking at a split between the promotion linked above and the WSPA.
sentientcitizen: Rose Tyler throws her head back and laughs. (Default)

[personal profile] sentientcitizen 2011-03-18 12:41 am (UTC)(link)
I don't have any suggestions, but if you get any good ones I'd love if you'd pass them on. All the charities I'm most familiar with are religious; admittedly, they do good work, but it sort of grates at me a bit. I used to be a big fan of Mennonite Central Committee. Then I realized they won't hire sexually active non-heterosexuals or people who aren't members of a church congregation. That left a bit of a bitter taste in my mouth. They still do good work - really, truly excellent work - but...

[identity profile] kristen999.livejournal.com 2011-03-17 03:25 am (UTC)(link)
I'm about to go to bed and leave to go out of town, but I've I've always held in high regard http://www.msf.org/ which is connected to doctors without borders.

My charity of choice is normally http://teamrubiconusa.org/ but they are not going to Japan based on their capabilities and the country's infrastructure, but wanted to give you the link for the future.
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[identity profile] skaredykat.livejournal.com 2011-03-17 05:25 am (UTC)(link)
I tend to check in with charitynavigator.org and veer toward four-star charities on there, for legitimacy and information on whether most of the money goes to actual relief vs. overhead & fundraising. (DWB tends to be my default safe-choice.) Also maybe ask [livejournal.com profile] busaikko if she has ideas, as she's there?

[identity profile] ninjamonkey73.livejournal.com 2011-03-17 10:38 am (UTC)(link)
Just to throw a different one in the mix, Wil Wheaton posted this article yesterday, labelled "Direct Japan Relief".

http://syndicated.livejournal.com/wilwheaton/692705.html

I find vetting charities to be nearly impossible, unfortunately, and I like to think of myself as an internet ninja.

[identity profile] violetcheetah.livejournal.com 2011-03-17 03:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Heather has seen good recs for http://www.directrelief.org/. Highly ranked by Forbes as far as fundraising stats.