• 0121 525 1127
  • support@scvo.info
  • Facebook Twitter
  • Membership Benefits
  • Subscribe to our E-Bulletin
  • Home
  • About SCVO
    • Achievements
    • Membership Benefits
    • Trustees & Staff
    • Staying Informed – SCVO Communications
  • Support Services
    • Financial Management & Support
    • Funding
    • Local Grants
    • Governance & Committee Support
    • Help for Small & New Groups
    • Volunteering Support
    • Building Resilience in Sandwell Communities
    • Meeting Space
  • Voice
    • Children & Young People
    • Good Engagement
    • Health & Social Care
    • Leaders Forum
    • VCS Representatives
    • Sandwell Advice Providers Network
    • Jubilee Food Network
  • Resources
    • Route2wellbeing Portal
    • Funding Digests
    • Funding Portal
    • Easyfundraising
    • Jobs & Opportunities
    • E-Bulletins
    • VCS Database
    • Web Links
    • Events
  • Local Impact
    • Local Impact Snapshots
    • Local Impact Spotlight
    • Local Impact Videos
  • News
  • Contact Us
    • Site Policies
  • Search

    Categories

    • Blog
    • Children & Young People
    • Did you know…?
    • Funding
    • Health & Wellbeing
    • Housing, Environment & Economy
    • Local Impact Spotlight
    • News and Events
    • Safer, Stronger Communities
    • SCVO News
    • Swap-shop
    • Training Support and Resources
    • Uncategorized
    • Vacancies
    • VCS Feature
    • Volunteering

    Archive

    • March 2023
    • February 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2022
    • September 2022
    • August 2022
    • July 2022
    • June 2022
    • May 2022
    • April 2022
    • March 2022
    • February 2022
    • January 2022
    • December 2021
    • November 2021
    • October 2021
    • September 2021
    • August 2021
    • July 2021
    • June 2021
    • May 2021
    • April 2021

    Online Donations to Foodbanks Showing Signs of ‘Compassion Fatigue’

    29 Jun 2020 by Libby Mahoney

    • Tags:
    • Community News
    • news
    • Social Value
    • Categories:
    • Blog
    • VCS Feature

    Donations to foodbanks via crowdfunding websites have declined in May and June after peaking at the beginning of the lockdown, according to data from the University of Kent.

    Professor Peter Taylor-Gooby and Dr Tomas Petricek from the University of Kent gathered information on donations to foodbanks via crowdfunding websites GoFundMe, Just Giving and Virgin Money Giving using data-scraping software.

    They found that in February, before the beginning of the Covid-19 crisis, fundraising appeals for foodbanks raised about £8,000-£10,000 a week. From early March, the figure started increasing very quickly, going from £50,000 a week at the beginning of the month to £1m week after 23 March, when the national lockdown was imposed.

    After that initial peak, donations to foodbanks via crowdfunding websites started to decrease. They amounted to about £600,000 a week in early May and fell to £125,000 a week in early June.

    ‘Level of support is falling’

    The research is partial, because it does not look at other donation channels, such as direct donations via foodbanks’ websites, corporate support, or donation boxes in supermarkets, among others. The crowdfunding websites are scraped every two weeks, so some short-term appeals could also have slipped through the research net.

    But it suggests that donors are showing signs of “compassion fatigue”, decreasing their levels of support at a time when need is likely to increase further, the authors of the research have said.

    Peter Taylor-Gooby, professor of social policy at the University of Kent, said: “The findings indicate how the amount raised took off in step with the numbers of coronavirus cases and the numbers claiming out of work benefits.

    “The results so far show great and unexpected public generosity. Many people gave money to help vulnerable fellow citizens. But the level of support is falling. As the numbers of cases declined from April onwards, so did the income from the appeals.

    “Official statistics show that, although the pandemic is in retreat, the number of benefit claimants continues to rise. All commentators believe even more people will lose their jobs as furloughing is wound down and the recession bites home, with a possible further impact from Brexit. Demand for food parcels will rise further. We can expect more urgent appeals for funds.

    “Pandemic is widely seen as a common threat. Will people be as generous when we move into recession and very high unemployment? The indications of compassion fatigue are disturbing.”

    To read the full Civil Society news click here.

    Source: Civil Society News

    • 0121 525 1127
    • support@scvo.info
    • Facebook Twitter

    Company Number: 03570517  Charity Number: 1071514

    © 2023 Copyright scvo.info