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United Way Tops Target by $100,000 - CUETS Wins
Spirit Award
Regina Leader Post
Thursday, December 9, 1999
Article by Will Chabun
of The Leader-Post
It's a 'three-peat'.
For the third time in three consecutive years, Regina's
United Way campaign has topped its target - and set
a record in the process.
Campaign chair Ed Allinutt told a high-spirited campaign
wind-up luncheon on Wednesday that this year's campaign
has collected $1,947,056.
That's almost $100,000 above this year's target of
$1,850,000 - and substantially more than the $1,770,000
raised last year.
"Ladies and gentlemen, pat yourselves on the back for
raising the most money ever raised in the history of
the United Way of Regina!" Allinutt told the packed
gathering at the Delta.
Allinutt's deputy, Dan McMurtry, said the key to this
year's successful campaign was getting a large number
of volunteers. He placed the total at around 3,000,
including workplace volunteers, personnel "loaned" to
the United Way by local corporations and agencies and
the "campaign cabinet" of executives.
Also important was getting out the campaign's message
by distributing accounts of how campaign funds help
37 member agencies. "What's a few dollars to you, or
I, for them is really significant," he said. "It really
does drive home the fact that a little bit can go a
long way.
"It's a much-overused phrase, but it certainly is true:
Connecting people's donations to the actual work that's
performed, I think, makes it more meaningful."
The luncheon was punctuated with success stories, like
how CUETS (Credit Union Electronic Transaction Services)
increased its donations by a staggering 377 percent,
or the name of the organization whose management and
staff made the biggest individual donation: Ipsco, with
a total of $105,046.
There was the workplace with the highest proportion
of "leadership givers" - staffers who gave more than
$500 each: Regina's Greystone Capital Management.
And then there was the story of campaign manager Kelly
McElree, who'd pledged to let himself be shaved bald
if the campaign exceeded its goal. That's exactly what
happened - to the raucous cheers of the 400 people at
Wednesday's luncheon.
Asked how long it had been since three consecutive
targets had been exceeded, a beaming United Way CEO
Wayne Hellquist said, "near as we can track it back,
not since the 1970s. And until the last three years,
we hadn't met the goal in about 20 years. So to pass
our goal by $100,000, once again illustrates the importance
of giving to our community."
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