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Benj and Jessica launched a nonprofit. Follow our journey as we built a 501(c)(3) and a web site, and now usher in an endless stream of worthy charity nominees and monthly grant winners!

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It’s scary how much we’ve raised for charity!

Money Kills by WhiteEyedFrog

Including the check we wrote this month for September's winner, Youth Pride Inc., we've awarded over $30,000 in grants to our monthly winners at Charitocracy. And we have over $10,000 more raised already for the next 12 monthly winners.

While we still need to crack the code on how to grow this thing into the future, it's nice to look back at how far we've come. I've included an October 31 snapshot of our Winners page. You can see it for yourself here.

Winning Cause Month Pot Votes Voters Nominator
Youth Pride Inc. 2018-09 $1753 18.7 20 melissa745
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society 2018-08 $1391 26.5 27 amrizzo01
RAICES 2018-07 $1375 26.83 28 TdotWING
Together We Rise 2018-06 $1237 25 27 SuZQ
Sky's the Limit Fund 2018-05 $1114 34.67 38 obxlisa
Outer Banks SPCA 2018-04 $1103 27.34 29 bjstager
National Public Radio 2018-03 $1073 30 31 Maurice
Innocence Project 2018-02 $1072 26 27 cperg814
mikeroweWORKS Foundation 2018-01 $1478 31 33 emily0153
International Justice Mission 2017-12 $1520 27 28 Alistair and Rebecca
ALS Guardian Angels 2017-11 $1540 30 30 Maggie
UNIDOS Disaster Relief Fund @ HF 2017-10 $1465 35.5 37 TdotWING
Hurricane Harvey Relief Fund at GHCF 2017-09 $2571 48.39 51 brun064
Special Olympics 2017-08 $1281 30.34 32 obxsunny
American Civil Liberties Union 2017-07 $1241 24.75 27 TdotWING
Planned Parenthood 2017-06 $1225 28.24 30 Bethany
It Gets Better Project 2017-05 $1222 30.4 32 Stephanie
Comfort Cases 2017-04 $1242 29.5 31 OBXHubands
Children's Hospital Medical Center 2017-03 $1218 29.34 33 Maurice
Southern Poverty Law Center 2017-02 $1171 38.83 41 damianf
Feline Hope 2017-01 $752 34.75 36 obxlisa
Girls on the Run 2016-12 $731 28 29 Elinora
Kids in Need Foundation 2016-11 $524 23 26 SeattleStrong
Fisher House Foundation 2016-10 $539 28.5 32 Sue Wilkerson
The NEA Foundation 2016-09 $500 26.29 31 sherylwthorp
Total Distributed $30,338

 
Happy Halloween! And don't forget to get those votes in before midnight!!

Occupy Sydney, Day 5, "THE NEW GLOBAL CURRENCY IS LOVE" by Newtown grafitti

Money Kills by WhiteEyedFrog (at the top of post) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.

Occupy Sydney, Day 5, "THE NEW GLOBAL CURRENCY IS LOVE" by Newtown grafitti is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic License.

Spotlight on nominee The ChadTough Foundation

Nominee The ChadTough Foundation

Next in our series of posts about new Charitocracy nominees, we have nominee The ChadTough Foundation, nominated by donor brian. They fund research and raise awareness of pediatric brain tumors, with emphasis on Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG). You can find their web site here.

A few words on Charitocracy

Firstly, for newcomers: here's how it works. Donors pool their monthly contributions, as little as $1. The cause with the most votes each month wins the pot. No matter how much or how little you contribute, each donor at Charitocracy gets one vote. This is where charity meets democracy. So please share this post and ask your friends to join us and vote! That's how we spread the word and, as a result, grow the monthly pot. The bigger the pot, the bigger our positive impact on the world!

About nominee The ChadTough Foundation

The most hated word in the world of pediatric brain tumors is “rare.” “Rare” is the reason there is not enough research being done. “Rare” is the reason there aren’t drugs being developed. “Rare” is the reason there is so little funding. “Rare” is why our kids don’t have more options. The three facts below negate the claim of “rare”:

  • Cancer is the number one disease killer of children in America.
  • Brain tumors are the leading cause of cancer-related death in children.
  • DIPG is the leading cause of death from brain tumors in children.

DIPG

DIPG is a brain tumor found in the Pons of the brain stem. Children are typically diagnosed between the ages of 5-7 with around 300-350 new cases per year in the United States. The median survival rate is 9 months from diagnosis, only 10% of patients survive 2 years from diagnosis. Long term survivors total less than 1%.

What makes DIPG so difficult to treat is not only its location (a very small area of the brain stem responsible for many critical bodily functions including breathing, swallowing, respiration, equilibrium and eye movement) but also the fact that it is “diffuse” (as opposed to looking like a solid mass or ball, it spreads out and mixes with healthy cells, it is sometimes described as looking “marbled”).

One of our doctors called it “the worst kind of tumor in the worst possible place.” The only standard of care to treat DIPG is radiation. Radiation is used to shrink the tumor giving temporary relief of symptoms but after a period of time the tumor typically grows back. As it grows, it cuts off those critical bodily functions until the child can no longer swallow or breathe and eventually succumbs. You cannot surgically remove DIPG and until very recently it was considered dangerous to even biopsy. This has resulted in very little DIPG tissue being available for researchers to study.

Perspective

As a parent of a child with DIPG it’s hard to describe the bewilderment and anger you feel when you are told the standard of care for DIPG has not changed in over 40 years. When you combine a lack of tissue to study with a severe lack of funding for childhood cancer, you end up with no progress.

Approximately 4% of the taxpayer-funded National Cancer Institute’s (NCI) annual budget is directed toward pediatric cancer. Not 4% for DIPG, not 4% for pediatric brain tumors… 4% for ALL of childhood cancer! Drug development is a huge issue for pediatric cancer. Drugs are developed almost exclusively for adult cancers and then simply “taken down” to treat pediatric cancers. Our children deserve better than this.

Vision

DIPG presents a great challenge. It is an extremely difficult and complex disease. We believe a cure will come from talented, passionate people working collaboratively. It will come from “Thinking outside the Box” and taking some risks. It will come from small breakthroughs happening in many different areas of medicine. The ChadTough Foundation is committed to funding this work.

So visit the page of nominee The ChadTough Foundation on Charitocracy to vote for, like, or discuss this cause! And watch this video about ChadTough's namesake, and the organization's efforts to rid the world of DIPG:

Thirteen is the Luckiest Number

Twelve

Twelve is the new Thirteen

I have ended the tyranny. Since Charitocracy day one, September 1, 2016, there has been an automatic 8.3% "tax" or "tip" to cover Charitocracy's overhead. A 13th month of contribution, essentially. We've used those funds to cover credit card fees, nationwide solicitation registration, web site hosting, software licenses, insurance, advertising, postage, inkjet ink, etc. But those days of mandatory tipping are over! $12 is the new minimum donation, with 100% going to winning charities.

Why now, Benj? Why ever?

I've been trying to put myself into the shoes of strangers. [Not literally, because if you're familiar with my feet, you know they probably wouldn't fit.] These strangers hear about Charitocracy from a friend, or see an ad on Facebook, or see me rocking a Charitocracy sweat jacket, running shirt, or coffee mug. They visit our web site, and then NOTHING happens.

One of my theories is this: they see a $13 donation where $12 goes to 12 charities. They think: scam alert! Charitocracy is skimming a buck off each $13 donor, and probably using it to charter flights to the Caribbean.

Not a bad theory. 59 cents of that $1 goes straight to credit card fees, but the remaining 41 cents would add up fast. Almost fast enough to cover our other expenses it turns out. But luckily we have donors whose employers match, or even double-match, their donations. So we've found ourselves plenty of breathing room for paying the bills while sending 100% of web site donations (and Facebook donations) into the monthly award pots for the winning charities. Still no Caribbean vacations, so clearly we have some kinks yet to sort out.

We appreciate each and every mandatoryincluded tip we've received from our early adopters during our 1st two years. You've paid for our setup costs to get up and running, and we're ever grateful. But from now on, these tips are entirely optional! You can go to My Account > Donation Change to switch to a non-tipping annual donation at any time. And new signups will not have this tip selected by default. It's an opt-in for all new donations. Maybe everyone will still choose to donate a "baker's dozen" 13 months worth every year, but this could be one less red flag for new donors who don't know us personally like many of you do.

In Other News

  • We had a larger than usual monthly pot of $1753 for September winner Youth Pride Inc! That's thanks to $2 matches per new social media Like/Follow, as well as matches for each new/upgraded donation. Well done!
  • We're continuing this promotion, so keep on inviting friends to join us or at least like our various social media accounts! Potential $8 in the October pot for follows: $2 each for Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn. And then if one joins at the $12/year level, that's an additional $24 we'll match!
  • Despite the busy month, huge gain in likes (over 800 now on Facebook), and big pot, we had fewer voters in September than usual. Combine that with a swing of only 2.5 votes between 3rd place and 1st, your vote would certainly have an impact in selecting the winner. Get out the vote!
  • Just a few more hours to sweeten the pot for Youth Pride Inc. or to nominate a new cause for October. Looking forward to another great month!

I mean, really it's your choice.  But $13?  Still the best donation.