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Losing “The Campaign” Why Florida should refocus its workplace on sensible giving

FSECC Report: Losing the Campaign

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Page 1: FSECC Report: Losing the Campaign

Losing “The Campaign”Why Florida should refocus its workplace on sensible giving

Page 2: FSECC Report: Losing the Campaign

A Dying Program Decline in Gross FSECC Donations since 2009

↑15.8%

Page 3: FSECC Report: Losing the Campaign

Becoming the Problem

Fiscal Year Fundraising Totals Fees Charged by Fiscal Agent

% Withheld as Fees

2009 $4,171,178 $923,931 22%

2010 $3,737,204 $850,877 22.7%

2011 $2,665,834 $801,032 30%

2012 $1,762,031 $796,616 45%

2013 $982,387 $546,415 55.6%

Page 4: FSECC Report: Losing the Campaign

Paying for the Problem

Page 5: FSECC Report: Losing the Campaign

Credibility

•FSECC’s inefficiency is not a secret•Accounts of employees still feeling pressured

Employer - Employee

• Subsidizing private charitable donations• Operating at a higher cost than the charities themselves

Taxpayer - Government

• Difficulty justifying an inefficient program

Coworker - Coworker

Page 6: FSECC Report: Losing the Campaign

Sensible Giving Campaign

Messaging

-These measures HELP charities-These measures show we care

Executive Order

- No subsidizing private giving on state time

Call to Action

- Call on the Legislature to work with the Governor to find a sensible solution

Communication

- With charities- With taxpayers

New Opportunities

- New technology- Information dissemination

Page 7: FSECC Report: Losing the Campaign

Results Increase the percentage of donations going to charity Saving Florida costs for

Administration Litigation

Boost in Workplace Morale Preservation of Credibility

“In my three years as governor, I have yet to have anyone come into my office and lobby me to spend less taxpayer money.” – Gov. Rick Scott, 2014 State of the State