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Duck coaches say “Bah, humbug” to state’s Charitable Fund Drive

12/24/2015: Altruism takes many forms, some easier to measure than others.

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Every year the state of Oregon runs a Charitable Fund Drive for employees. You know the drill. You get a few emails asking you to sign up for payroll deductions to support community groups like the United Way, Food For Lane County, Womenspace, and so on. This year’s drive is wrapping up, if you haven’t given yet you can do it here.

While some people object to being asked to give at work, on the plus side you can decide which state and local charities will get your money, you don’t get a lot of junk mail, and the charities don’t have to spend money soliciting donors.

And since every UO employee gets basically the same emails about the CFD and has similar incentives, donations are a convenient if imperfect measure for comparing altruistic behavior.

So, who gives? The CFD doesn’t report individual data, but it does post giving by department, here. This year, as usual, the UO Business School and the librarians are big donors. Journalism was also very generous:

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The Duck Athletic Department? Not so much:

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Which seems a little stingy, given the fat raises that Scott Coltrane gave Rob Mullens and the football coaches this year. Duck Advocate Tobin Klinger reports, in Around the O:

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Interestingly, Rob Mullens and the Duck coaches are devoted to the idea of encouraging their unpaid student-athletes to do community service, in-between their classes, practice, weightlifting, studying, travel, and game days. The program is called “O’Heroes”:

SERVICE REQUESTS

The student-athletes at the University of Oregon are committed to giving back and serving the Eugene/Springfield community. Through the O Heroes program student-athletes consistently complete up to 4,000 hours of service per year.
The focus of the O Heroes is concentrated in three key initiatives: Education, Service, and Health. Student-Athletes voluntarily fulfill many service requests from the community. However, priority will be given to programs that meet the objectives of O Heroes, are in Lane County, and/or take place on a “Day of Service”.

 

My understanding is that O’Heroes awards points to the players, based on how many charitable events they participate in. Duck strategic communicator Craig Pintens then hypes the events in press releases and on “Around the 0”, as here. The players can cash their points in for things like airfare from the “Student Assistance Fund” so their parents can get a chance to watch them play.

8 Comments

  1. Duckduckgo 12/24/2015

    Thanks to all who donated, including those from Athletics.

  2. Golden Parachutist 12/24/2015

    To be fair, UO donations are almost three times as high as OSU’s and eight times as high as PSU’s. OSU’s Intercollegiate Athletic Department has one contribution of $75. I assume UO’s institutional culture pushes the Charitable Fund Drive more heavily than the other state universities do.

  3. Jake Marley 12/24/2015

    This post captures the Christmas spirit so well. It took me three visits to get old Ebenezer to change, but I’m giving up on these jocks. Best of luck to your efforts though!

  4. XDH 12/24/2015

    Careful, UOM….. Athletics’ 5K in donations beat your home department both in total amount given and avg per donation. Of course, they topped us too….

    • uomatters Post author | 12/24/2015

      Yeah, but then Helfrich gets paid more than our entire department.

      • just different 12/24/2015

        It’s well established that the richer you are, the less generous you are as a percentage of income, by a wide margin. So why should the trend be different at UO? But I’ll bet it’s still true that even normalized for wealthy American stinginess, the AD still comes up short.

        • uomatters 12/24/2015

          I really should be wrapping presents, but your post got me wondering, so I did some googling.

          The conventional wisdom has been that the poor and rich both give higher %’s of their income than the middle class. As you suggest, the latest data shows that the giving ratio for the rich has declined. I hadn’t known that, thanks!

          Philanthropy.com has a nice data interface. IRS data, so all kinds of cross-tabs: https://philanthropy.com/interactives/how-america-gives#county/41039

          But, at least for Lane County, the U-shaped relationship still holds, barely, and not necessarily for coaches: the IRS doesn’t distinguish between those making $200,001 and $3,500,000.

          Income, Giving ratio
          <=25K, 7.3%
          25K-50K, 3.6%
          50K-75K, 2.9%
          75K-100K, 2.6%
          200K+. 3.2%

          One theory is that the richest are now so rich and detached from RL that they can't figure out how to give it away. Other explanations are welcome.

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