Fewer people making charitable donations in B.C.
From 74% in 2011 to 59% in 2016, according to new Vancity report
At a time a year where many are thinking about the less fortunate, Vancity has issued a new report indicating British Columbians are donating less.
The percentage of people who made charitable donations has dropped by 15 per cent in the last five years — from 74 per cent in 2011 to 59 per cent in 2016, according to the credit union.
The report says the average annual donation has gone from $967 in 2013 to $888 in 2016, and 46 per cent say their ability to make charitable donations has declined in the past three years.
- Check charity before you give this season, watchdog says
- Wealthy people more self-serving when it comes to giving to charity, says UBC study
- Christmas charity: How much to give, and to whom?: Your comments
Charity for the homeless needs 1,000 gifts for Christmas
One organization that can attest to that is Homeless Partners.
The group's website has dozens of profiles written by people in the Lower Mainland and Victoria — on how they came to be homeless, and what they hope to receive for Christmas.
"We've had experiences where when they open their gifts on Christmas morning, a man who has been on the street for many years will begin to cry because no one thought about him before," said Daniel Keeran, co-founder of the organization.
The asks range from smaller items like warm boots, blankets, sleeping bags, to some more extravagant ones, such as computers, and tickets to a Vancouver Tim Mcgraw/Faith Hill concert in May.
But Keeran says this year, there are still around 1,000 gifts that haven't been funded and he's concerned some people may go without.
He's hoping people will open their wallets after learning the men and women's stories.
"We want people to understand that there's a story that explains the homeless condition that they are in," he said.