[Originally published Dec 14, 2015]
When Gail McGovern was picked to head the American Red Cross in 2008, the organization was reeling. Her predecessor had been fired after impregnating a subordinate. The charity was running an annual deficit of hundreds of millions of dollars.
A former AT&T executive who had taught marketing at Harvard Business School, McGovern pledged to make the tough choices that would revitalize the Red Cross, which was chartered by Congress to provide aid after disasters. In a speech five years ago, she imagined a bright future, a "revolution" in which there would be "a Red Cross location in every single community."
It hasn’t worked out that way.
McGovern and her handpicked team of former AT&T colleagues have presided over a string of previously unreported management blunders that have eroded the charity’s ability to fulfill its core mission of aiding Americans in times of need.
Under McGovern, the Red Cross has slashed its payroll by more than a third, eliminating thousands of jobs and closing hundreds of local chapters. Many veteran volunteers, who do the vital work of responding to local fires and floods have also left, alienated by what many perceive as an increasingly rigid, centralized management structure.
Far from opening offices in every city and town, the Red Cross is stumbling in response to even smaller scale disasters.
When a wildfire swept through three Northern California counties in September, the Red Cross showed up but provided shelter to just 25 of 1,000 victims at one site. Because of the charity’s strict rules and disorganization, many evacuees slept outside for over a week, even when the weather turned bad. "These families were sleeping in the rain with their children," said Wendy Lopez, a local volunteer.
Local officials were so angry they relieved the Red Cross of its duties.
Some emergency planners around the country have concluded they can no longer rely on the charity..
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Red Cross, been around for decades. 1 NFL football player (JJ Watt from the Houston Texans) donates $100K, challenges others and within a week has OVER $20 MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILLION in donations.
ReplyDeleteRed Cross's continued problems and the easy of a football player obtaining donations.....makes one think the Red Cross is on life support/will no longer exist in the future!
Many of us left the Red Cross in Salisbury after the "reorganization" that gutted the staff and local responsibilities of the chapter.
ReplyDeleteI have not donated to the RED CROSS in 20 years, since I found out how much they used for administrative expense and salaries when they claim to help millions of people. I feel they are just another con organization that should not be tax exempt / or deduction.
ReplyDeleteThey are a con organization! I will not give a penny to them. It's absurd what is paid to the CEO and other administrative cost and salaries.
ReplyDelete