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November 4, 2017 at 12:48 am #211727
Anonymous
GuestI love everything about this article. Every. Single. Thing. November 4, 2017 at 2:52 am #324912Anonymous
Guest:thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup: November 4, 2017 at 11:46 am #324913Anonymous
GuestYep :thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup: We need more stories like these.November 4, 2017 at 12:10 pm #324914Anonymous
GuestYay! I stayed in a hotel in the Rio Grande Station area across from the park last July, and the view out my window was very distressing. It’s good to see the Church and community doing something constructive about homelessness. November 4, 2017 at 2:10 pm #324915Anonymous
GuestBig :thumbup: But I just can’t help but add, “I wish this wasn’t so uncommon.”
November 4, 2017 at 3:16 pm #324916Anonymous
GuestYes, this is great news. But like Lookinghard said, this should not be news, it should be normal…….. November 4, 2017 at 4:46 pm #324917Anonymous
GuestQuote:Big
:thumbup: But I just can’t help but add, “I wish this wasn’t so uncommon.”
Having spoken one on one with top leaders in the Humanitarian Department this is the goal. Right now there are various facets working on this. From their lips to my ears, “This is the direction the church wants to move.”
They were very generous in granting funds for the homeless in a non-Utah state. A lot of it is connected to learning the facets of programs and how the funds would help.
Just walking up and handing anyone loads of money is not always useful. Take lottery winners as an example.
November 4, 2017 at 7:42 pm #324918Anonymous
Guestmom3 wrote:
Quote:Big
:thumbup: But I just can’t help but add, “I wish this wasn’t so uncommon.”
Having spoken one on one with top leaders in the Humanitarian Department this is the goal. Right now there are various facets working on this. From their lips to my ears, “This is the direction the church wants to move.”
They were very generous in granting funds for the homeless in a non-Utah state. A lot of it is connected to learning the facets of programs and how the funds would help.
Just walking up and handing anyone loads of money is not always useful. Take lottery winners as an example.
Given that I still pay a full tithe on gross and a very sizable fast offering, I would like to know that my funds are not being wasted.I see it somewhat the same as giving cash to people on the street corner. I have heard people that are dedicated to helping the homeless and they say you should never do that. Instead I actually buy sets of $10 McDonalds gift cards and keep them in my car. I give those out since they can’t be used for drugs or liquor. And if someone is really hungry, they will be fine with some McDonalds food and it seems a McDonalds is never far away.
But there are good organizations that are cash starved that really could do some great things with some $. It doesn’t take too much time to vet a few and pass on amounts a lot less than this sizable donation. And I think they should mention it (but not make a big deal out of it). I think it will focus some additional $ and efforts to these other good causes.
But once again – this is really good.
November 4, 2017 at 7:54 pm #324919Anonymous
GuestThis is great to see, and not that surprising given the spotlight they had on giving homes to the homeless before. I believe they featured it on Colbert or one of those Daily News spinoffs. November 4, 2017 at 8:08 pm #324920Anonymous
GuestLookingHard wrote:
Given that I still pay a full tithe on gross and a very sizable fast offering, I would like to know that my funds are not being wasted.
Quote:The donation comes from the church’s Humanitarian Aid Fund, which comes from the voluntary contributions by church members.
I’m not knocking the donation, just clarifying. This donation came from the humanitarian aid fund, which is separate from tithing.
But you have given me an idea… start paying tithing in McDonald’s gift cards.
:angel: November 4, 2017 at 8:10 pm #324921Anonymous
GuestQuote:Given that I still pay a full tithe on gross and a very sizable fast offering, I would like to know that my funds are not being wasted.
I see it somewhat the same as giving cash to people on the street corner. I have heard people that are dedicated to helping the homeless and they say you should never do that. Instead I actually buy sets of $10 McDonalds gift cards and keep them in my car. I give those out since they can’t be used for drugs or liquor. And if someone is really hungry, they will be fine with some McDonalds food and it seems a McDonalds is never far away.
But there are good organizations that are cash starved that really could do some great things with some $. It doesn’t take too much time to vet a few and pass on amounts a lot less than this sizable donation. And I think they should mention it (but not make a big deal out of it). I think it will focus some additional $ and efforts to these other good causes. At least the department I worked with wants to do that. The vetting on the surface seems easy, but it takes a bit more. Not because they don’t care, but like you they would rather give a McDonalds’ card (something with usefulness) than empty funds that will be lost in a short run. Each request is similar to a grant. Upon completion of the “useage” a written, signed, form is returned.
They are desirous to help and desirous to use their funds wisely. This project in this article is large and local. Every day smaller ones are being serviced by the same department with funds appropriate to the needs.
Announcing or advertising the success gets tricky. Some will find fault with a religion calling attention to itself. Other’s we cry “Why not more.” Also other contributers might feel slighted that their offering wasn’t really much if we just handed over major funds all the time.
I appreciated the team that helped me. As a spouse of a post mo, he was really impressed to. He got to watch the whole thing up close.
November 5, 2017 at 5:18 pm #324922Anonymous
Guest10 million is not a small amount. It could have built a few chapels. I applaud the generosity. I also love that this appears to somewhat of a partnership. This donation/program is part of a larger coalition effort to combat homelessness in the area.
November 5, 2017 at 5:38 pm #324923Anonymous
GuestThis makes me happy. November 11, 2017 at 4:59 am #324924Anonymous
GuestHere’s another article about the Humanitarian Department and the recent natural disasters. -
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