Each One, Help One
by Elizabeth O'Brien
As working families find it
ever harder to pay their bills,
a nonprofit organization
connects small donors to
people with modest needs.
When Zayne Logsdon struggled with eyesight problems five years ago, doctors told his mother Lisa that they could help but it would cost her. Special eyeglasses for then-
four-year-old Zayne, whose sensory problems were brought on by
autism, would set her back more than $500. Logsdon despaired.
Her husband's own health trouble recently had forced him out of
work, and she was a full-time graduate student earning her teaching credentials. The Kentucky couple could not afford the cost of
helping their son make sense of the world around him.
Logsdon contacted her local Lions Club chapter and several
other organizations, but none offered assistance. The family did
not qualify for government aid. A desperate Logsdon searched
the Internet for a solution, and she stumbled upon Modest Needs.
The nonprofit foundation, then based in Tennessee, gives grants to
working people to help them cover unexpected one-time expenses medical bills, car repairs, large heating bills that they other-wise could not afford. Thinking her tab hardly modest, Logsdon sent Modest Needs a request for just $50. Before long she had a reply from Modest Needs' founder and president, Keith Taylor: His organization would pay the entire $557 cost of the special lenses.
Today, Zayne is a lively nine-year-old who loves music and
excels in math; this past May, doctors even said he had outgrown
his need for his glasses. He spends most of his school day in a
mainstream third-grade classroom, progress that would not have
been possible without those glasses, Logsdon said. Modest Needs
helped her family with a budget crisis that, while crushing, was
hardly unique. "The truth of the matter is it could happen to
anyone," Logsdon said. With Modest Needs, she said, a recipient
"could be your neighbor, your best friend, someone in your family.
I can really appreciate that."
Logsdon was one of the earliest recipients of Modest Needs.
Since it began in 2002, the organization has evolved from a part-
time project into a full-time operation, now based in New York
City, that funnels 100 percent of its donations from individual
donors to carefully screened recipients. At a time when soaring
health care and fuel costs have made it harder for middle- and
working-class families to make ends meet, Modest Needs offers a
rare and well-targeted form of relief. "It's very humbling to look at
the true scope of what the need is," Taylor said. He didn't realize
how daunting his mission would be when he started out. "Had I
known that, I might've been deterred, so maybe it's good I didn't."
The organization's goals are twofold: to prevent recipients from falling into poverty, and to open donors' eyes to their power to change the world. To achieve these goals, it relies on a deceptively simple model. Donors can give any amount they choose to Modest Needs, mainly through its website. Some donors give once; others give on a weekly or monthly basis. Each month, anyone who donated during that month can go online to review funding applications and rank them on a scale of one through nine. Every donor's vote gets equal weight, no matter how much he or she gave. The funds raised over the previous month are dispersed to the highest-ranking applicants first, then on down the list until there's no money left. The average grant size is $355 and the maximum, with very few exceptions, is $1,000. Many recipients go on to become donors; at least one donor became a recipient.
Those on both sides of the funding equation praise Modest
Needs' un-bureaucratic approach. The organization can answer
requests in a matter of days, sending urgent aid to prevent, for
example, a family's heat from being turned off. And it pays recipients' bills directly, instead of sending cash, so there's never a question of how the funds are used. This streamlined giving process
allows donors to touch lives directly and with measurable results.
"There are very few layers in the organization," said Stella Kramer,
a regular Modest Needs donor who lives in New York City. "It's so
direct and it makes so much sense."
For many of Modest Needs' recipients, a few hundred dollars
can make the difference in retaining their jobs, or keeping their
homes, during
financial emergencies. Melanie Carter had been
a Modest Needs donor before she found herself struggling to
make a mortgage payment. Eye surgery had kept her out of work
for four months, and short-term disability benefits were slow to
arrive, so the Tennessee woman turned to Modest Needs in the
interim. "It saved my house," she said. Soon after she got back on
her feet, Carter resumed her regular donations to Modest Needs.
Taylor likes telling the story of a Texas woman who requested
help with a car payment so she could commute to work. Only
after she received the grant did the woman reveal that her son was
born without part of an arm, and that she also needed the car to
drive him to the hospital to pick up a free prosthesis he had been
promised.
If they can't turn to friends or family, working people in the
United States have few options when faced with unexpected
expenses like these. Most U.S. charities are umbrella organizations that collect large amounts of money to disburse to other
nonprofits, not to individuals. And public assistance is only for
the destitute. In New York City, for example, a family of four must
have an income below $18,330 before it can qualify for some public
assistance. "We make people get very poor before we give them
benefits," said Beth Weitzman, a professor of health and public policy at New York University's Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of
Public Service. Modest Needs investigates each grant application
to make sure it results from an emergency and not, say, poor budgeting. According to Taylor's calculations, the foundation's average
grant of $355 is worth a combined $1,837 to the recipient and the
state welfare system for every month that it keeps the recipient
working and off public assistance.
Taylor conceived of Modest Needs as a side project when he
worked as a tenure-track literature professor at Middle Tennessee State University, a job that he loved. He originally envisioned
a one-man charity funded with 10 percent of his salary, or about
$300 per month, as a way to honor those who helped him through
graduate school. In April of 2002, a friend posted Taylor's proposal
for Modest Needs on the popular community weblog Metafilter.
com. He received 700 emails in response, most of them from
people wanting to donate. The media picked up on the story, and
Taylor found himself on the Today show just two weeks later. He
took his project full time and moved to New York City in 2003,
and now oversees a full-time staff of three.
A boyish 39, Taylor clearly relishes his role as philanthropic matchmaker. Sitting at his tidy desk in Modest Needs' basement office in a brownstone on Manhattan's East Side a Michigan donor pays the rent he used phrases like "knock your socks off" when describing Modest Needs' rapid growth. "We built this organization on five dollars a head," he said. Modest Needs' motto "Small Change. A World of Difference." also speaks to the power of the small monthly donations that sustain it.
While Taylor has no background in nonprofit administration,
he has created a case study in fundraising best practices. Through
the online voting process, donors take an active role setting
Modest Needs' funding priorities. Taylor encourages recipients
to write thank-you testimonials, which are also posted on the
organization's website. Research shows that donors like to see this
kind of return on their investment. "We know that if you're able
to point to a specific impact, donors will be a lot more loyal," said
Adrian Sargeant, the Robert F. Hartsook chair in fundraising at
the Indiana University Center on Philanthropy. Taylor nurtures
his relationship with donors through a blog and regular emails,
which update them on Modest Needs news but do not solicit new
contributions, something many donors appreciate. Only
five to ten
percent of nonprofits engage in this kind of "relationship fundraising," Sargeant said, meaning they focus on developing long-term
bonds with donors instead of just relying on them to meet a particular funding target.
This model has created a community of committed donors. Of
the 3,000 people who give annually to Modest Needs, 500 give
regular monthly donations. Sixty-five percent of recipients turn
around and donate to Modest Needs at least once. A disabled
woman in Ohio sends a $1 check each month to thank Modest
Needs for helping her repair a rotting floor under her bathtub; she
lives on just $742 per month. These small contributions add up:
Modest Needs received an average of $34,000 per month from
individual donors in 2006.
But it's never just about the money. Taylor is also making good
on his goal to awaken people to their ability to effect very real
positive change in the world. For instance, in one online testimonial, a Florida woman wrote, "I've always dreamt of having money so
that I could be a major philanthropist and make a difference in our
communities, but Modest Needs has reminded me that this can
happen now." In another testimonial, a Kentucky recipient wrote,
"You have given me hope and faith in the goodness of people and
reminded me that God is in all of us."
Lisa Logsdon, too, understands the power of small donations
and now gives what she can to Modest Needs. Long after the
organization helped her help her son, she remembers how it
replaced her despair with a sense of hope. "When I got the grant
for Zayne's glasses, I got back a part of me that I had given up,"
Logsdon recalled. "That's a part of the grant that'll stay with me
for my whole life."
Elizabeth O'Brien is a writer who lives in Brooklyn. Her freelance writing has appeared in The New York Times and the Christian Science
Monitor. Her last article for Greater Good was about the youth theater
group City at Peace.