Special Report: Global Financial
Crisis
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- Charities across the
United States are facing the same stress as many of U.S. companies, banks and
other businesses, who have been under financial turbulence with their stocks
plummeting on Wall Street.
As their traditional business season approaches, aid
organizations are hobbled by dwindling resources and soaring demands for food,
clothing, money and other necessities, the Los Angeles Times reported Thursday
In Orange County near Los Angeles, a local Catholic
charity group assembled Thanksgiving dinners for 500 families this week, filling
plastic bags with frozen turkeys, cranberry sauce and other fixings.
But word of the free food attracted 920 families,
many of whom left empty-handed when the aid agency doled out the goods,
according to the newspaper.
"There were tears in our eyes as we had to turn
people away," Terrie Montminy, the air agency's executive director, was quoted
as saying. Montminy said he referred families elsewhere for food or invited them
back the next day for smaller packages.
And it's not only the desperately poor who are
banging on their doors. The web of poverty is expanding into the white-collar
workforce, with the souring economy upending professionals who were once
considered reliable contributors.
In Phoenix, Arizona, the director of a charity group
said that some of his donors have become his clients.
"I receive a call or two every week from people who
have been contributors for years who find themselves unemployed," said Paul
Martodam, chief executive of Catholic Charities Community Services in Phoenix.
"They feel terrible. They never pictured themselves
as being on the receiving side of charity," he said.
Charity administrators are forecasting a bleak
holiday season and an even more troubling year ahead, given government cutbacks
and contributors tightening their belts in response to the deteriorating
economy.
