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Wednesday, November 25, 2009
 

Directory of America's Charities U.S.News & World Report
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Donating time

Intro: Guide to giving
Step 1: Identify a cause
Step 2: Choose the charity
Step 3: What to give
Step 4: Donating time
Step 5: Gifts from the tax collector
Many charities, especially struggling or smaller groups, couldn't survive without volunteers. State budget cuts have forced the Vision homeless shelter in Luzerne County, Pa., to lay off several staffers. Without a roster of 3,000 volunteers to undertake tasks like supervising overnight shifts, the shelter--now housing 35 men--would close its doors.


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Many firms are making it easier for employees to offer their time. Timberland, an outdoor clothing company in Stratham, N.H., for instance, gives staffers 40 paid hours of volunteer time each year. Recent projects include building baseball parks in Valley, Ala., and painting schools in Baltimore. "It gives me great pride," says Carolyn Casey, director of social enterprise. "And it motivates the heck out of me."

If your office doesn't sponsor such a program, visit www.volunteermatch.org, where more than 26,000 nonprofits post gigs, from long-term tutoring stints to one-day homebuilding sessions. In 1999, VolunteerMatch hooked up expert knitter and crocheter RuthVolk, 42, with Bundles of Love, an Apple Valley, Minn., group that provides handmade baby clothes to low-income parents. Now she's on the board and devotes 100 hours a month to the group and its mission. Perhaps summing up the enduring appeal of American philanthropy, she says, "It's addicting to know you're needed."

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