Canada Post strike could lead to sharp drop in donations for local charities - Action News
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Kitchener-Waterloo

Canada Post strike could lead to sharp drop in donations for local charities

Charities in Waterloo region are concerned about the impact the Canada Post strike will have on mail-in donations during this holiday season.

United Way Waterloo Region says half of all their donations come throughthe mail

Canada Post strike impacts Cambridge Food Bank's largest annual fundraiser

2 days ago
Duration 2:17
Cambridge Food Bank Executive Director Dianne McLeod says that the Canada Post strike occurred just as they dropped off their mail campaign for their largest annual fundraiser. The strike also means mail-in cheques may not be received until after the holiday season.

Local charities are concerned about the impact the Canada Post strike will have on donations during the season of giving.

Non-profit organizations across Waterloo regionsay mail-in donations make up tens of thousands of dollars of the totalfunds collected during the Christmas season.

Scott Hamilton from United Way Waterloo Region says half of all their donations come throughthe mail during the months of November and December.

"This is the busiest time of year," Hamilton said. "My ask out there to our community would be to try to alter your own practices. If every year you've donated to a charity or United Way using a paper pledge form, maybe this is the year you want to try going online."

KellyFifieldfrom the Salvation Army in Kitchener says the organization received about $60,000 through the maillast Christmas. She says they're trying their best to educate donors about the strike.

"We have to hope and pray that it is going to work," she said, urging donors to consider donating in other ways.

Faune Lang is the director of philanthropy atFood4Kids Waterloo Region.She says the organization is already short by $10,000 because of the postal strike.

Like members from other non-profit organizations, she's also asking people to remember to donate online, over the phone or in person.

"That [shortage] is significant, especially when we're talking about a non-profit agency like ours that is not funded by the government," Lang said, adding that the losses are expected to drastically increase as Christmas Day comes closer.

"We heavily rely on a lot of the mail system. Alot of our donors are still using cheque books and that's the way that we like to give, which is fantastic. So that directly hits us especially at this time of year when it's most needed."

Plans to hand deliver flyers

Hamilton says United Way Waterloo Region has already printed 2,000 newsletters they were hoping to send to potential donors during the Christmas season. Those envelopes have been sealed and stampedand will be wasted if they can't be sent out before the end of this holiday season.

"One option we're looking at, and we've been talking about it for a while, ishand delivery," he said, adding it may be an opportunity to show volunteers are active in the community.

Lang is worried that not being able to mail out newsletters will directly impact their Giving4Kids holiday campaign.

"Our campaignhas just kicked off and unfortunately now anyone who doesn't have an email address isn't going to get that copy," she said.

"Our incredible team is now going to step in and then have to hand deliver and drive these newsletters out to make sure that they're in the hands of others in the community."

But for other organizations like the Salvation Army in Kitchener, hand delivery is no longer an option.

"We've had volunteers put those envelopes together, getting everything ready to go and we have dropped them off with Canada Post," Fifield said.

"But it is our understanding that they are sitting in the warehouse at Canada Post and they have not gone out yet. So not onlyare we not seeing the donations come in, but it also took time as well as finances to put those things together in order to get them out and that hasn't been able to go out yet."

Growth in demand

Diane McLeod is the CEO of the Cambridge Food Bank. She says the strike will directly impact their ability to address a growing need for support in the community.

"Typically during the holiday season, we would see a busy month for us with about 800 families coming through," she said, adding that the need has greatly increased since then.

"Last month in November, we saw 2,049 families come through... [and] we see a bit of a spike at Christmas time. So that's a really significant increase for us."

She says they spend about $400,000 on food that is not typically donated like milk and eggs. Some of the money also goes toward helpingfund various workshops like ahealth and wellness program for more than 450 children and youth.

With files from Karis Mapp