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Susan G. Komen Foundation Drops Funding For Planned Parenthood

Started by Conan71, February 01, 2012, 12:19:51 PM

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Townsend

It's a shame giving in to politics and outside pressure did harm to a respected charity.


http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/05/04/more-bad-news-for-komen-vice-president-biden-will-skip-d-c-event.html

More Bad News for Komen: Vice President Biden Will Skip D.C. Event

QuoteAs the Susan G. Komen foundation gears up for its most high-profile event of the year, its Global Race for the Cure in Washington, Vice President Joe Biden will not be hosting a kickoff barbecue for the annual D.C. race, as he and his wife, Dr. Jill Biden, have done in previous years.

Meanwhile, U.S. Congressman Mike Honda, who formed a team for the race last year that raised more than $10,000—making him the top fundraiser on Capitol Hill—told The Daily Beast that he will not be participating this year, linking the decision to Komen's move to cut funds to Planned Parenthood earlier this year amid pressure from Catholic bishops.

The Komen foundation quickly reversed its Planned Parenthood decision amid a backlash, but it has struggled since then, with some Komen affiliates around the country reporting declines in participants at spring races and other fundraising events.

The Bidens cited a scheduling conflict for their decision not to host the kickoff for the June 2 event.

Rep. Honda's office was critical of Komen, saying that while the congressman "supports the Susan G. Komen foundation's vital work," he also "believes that Komen must act to rebuild trust with all its partners," according to communications director Jack d'Annibale. "Komen must act to ensure its work benefits all women. Congressman Honda was the first member of Congress to call on Komen to reverse its Planned Parenthood decision, and he will remain vigilant for any attempt to use partisan politics to derail the urgent mission to defeat cancer and protect the health of women everywhere," d'Annibale said.

The Komen foundation said it remains "very optimistic about the race," according to Leslie Aun, Komen's vice president for communications. "The numbers are lower than where we were last year at this time, but typically what happens is that in the days leading up to the race, we close the gap." Aun, who will be leaving her post at Komen this month to join a D.C. group called Venture Philanthropy Partners, added, "Fewer dollars mean fewer women we serve, and that is really sad. Lots of women in D.C. need the funds Komen provides. This is about the women and our communities."

At last year's Washington race, nearly 40,000 people participated, with 45 congressional offices forming teams. The event raised more than $5 million, according to the Komen foundation. Seventy-five percent of funds raised at community races stay in the local community, going to screening for treatment and women, according to Komen. The other 25 percent goes to research.

"Just this week, someone at a local lesbian health organization for women with cancer told me she wished people knew what we do for them," Aun says. "We're their largest grantee." She added, "We hope people continue to support Komen for the right reasons. It is not about politics—it is about breast cancer. To politicize breast cancer is wrong. There are too many women at this moment who are counting on us to help them in their fight. Everything else is noise and nonsense."

In the 30 years since the Komen foundation was launched, it has raised some $1.9 billion for cancer research. More than 100,000 volunteers work in a nationwide network of affiliates. It was all the vision of Nancy Brinker. A former U.S. Ambassador to Hungary, she created the charity after her sister, Susan G. Komen, died of breast cancer in her mid-30s.

In the wake of the Planned Parenthood flap, Komen canceled it annual lobbying day in D.C., at which activists push for government programs, not for Komen programs—raising concerns that the controversy could have wide-reaching effects on women's health. Separately, Komen's New York City affiliate postponed two spring fundraisers amid concerns about participation. Affiliates from Florida to Arizona have reported declines in race participants and funds. Dana Curish, the executive director of the Central Indiana affiliate, said her recent race had 27,126 participants, down from 37,450 last year. "Right now our fundraising dollars are also down about 28 percent," she said, "but fundraising stays open until May 21, so we still have time to change those numbers and are offering incentives."

Not all affiliates attribute declines to the Planned Parenthood issue. Miriam Ross, the executive director of the Komen affiliate in Southwest Florida, said fundraising was down around 10 percent at her group's race—to $850,000—but that she believes the downturn was due to seasonal factors. "We live in a tourist area that is dependent on seasonal residents. This year was the warmest winter in decades, and that had an effect on the number of seasonal tourists that typically come down from January to April," she said. She added, "We had more than 10,000 attendees at the race this year. We have a tremendous amount of support from the local community, and over the past 10 years have been able to fund programs totaling $5.7 million. These local grants fund education, screening, and treatment for those people in our community who have nowhere else to turn."




Aun, the Komen spokeswoman, stressed the importance of support from local communities. "We know people have been upset. We've made mistakes, and we've apologized," she said. "We're trying to move forward in the best way we can. We cannot do that without the support of the local community. Our local community in D.C. is Congress."


guido911

Take a look at the comments to that story. Enlightening...
Someone get Hoss a pacifier.

Townsend

Quote from: guido911 on May 04, 2012, 10:16:08 AM
Take a look at the comments to that story. Enlightening...

The comments section is never enlightening to me.  Only a reminder to always view the general public with suspicion.

Conan71

"It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first" -Ronald Reagan

guido911

Quote from: Townsend on May 04, 2012, 10:17:14 AM
The comments section is never enlightening to me.  Only a reminder to always view the general public with suspicion.

You're not going all "patric" with the paranoia on us now, are you?
Someone get Hoss a pacifier.

Townsend

Quote from: guido911 on May 04, 2012, 10:34:47 AM
You're not going all "patric" with the paranoia on us now, are you?

Because of the comments section? 

Don't tell me you think the commenters online are a valid cross section of mainstream sane people.

They are sauerkraut, friendly bear, shadows.

If you think distrust of those folks makes someone paranoid then your views on things are more skewed than I had ever believed.


Hoss

Quote from: Townsend on May 04, 2012, 10:40:42 AM
Because of the comments section? 

Don't tell me you think the commenters online are a valid cross section of mainstream sane people.

They are sauerkraut, friendly bear, shadows.

If you think distrust of those folks makes someone paranoid then your views on things are more skewed than I had ever believed.



I think the term is 'blatantly biased'...

AquaMan

Reading them is only enlightening in that you see concrete examples of poorly informed, poorly educated, drug addled humanity. It is good to remember that this is the "common man" not the more reasonable folks you often work with. It makes you more aware of your own behavior when you stop to think that the guy you just shook your head at in traffic might be one of them and is reaching for a beatin' stick! I stopped reading them regularly when I mistakenly posted a comment and received vile threats against my well being.
onward...through the fog

patric

Quote from: guido911 on May 04, 2012, 10:34:47 AM
You're not going all "patric" with the paranoia on us now, are you?

The first couple of times is amusing, but you seem obsessed with personal attacks.
"Tulsa will lay off police and firemen before we will cut back on unnecessarily wasteful streetlights."  -- March 18, 2009 TulsaNow Forum

guido911

Quote from: patric on May 04, 2012, 11:13:07 AM
The first couple of times is amusing, but you seem obsessed with personal attacks.

You are right you freakin loser. jk. I'll back off.
Someone get Hoss a pacifier.