arborweb - Ann Arbor online
Follow us on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter! Ann Arbor Observer
    View Photo · Submit
Click for Ann Arbor, Michigan Forecast
May 21, 2013
Salvation Army bell ringer at Briarwood

Ringing up $180,000

"Every year God pulls us through"

by James Leonard

posted 12/16/2008

The holiday season’s been up and down for Ann Arbor’s Salvation Army. With a goal of $180,000, the bell ringers were down $2,000 the day before Thanksgiving, then up $800 the day after, down a week later by $1,400, then up the next day by $1,700 after donors slipped several very large checks into the Army’s bright red kettles.

Two weeks before Christmas, the bell ringers were down again. “Friday was not really good,” reports Major Dianna Williams, the woman in charge of the Army’s Ann Arbor outpost. “We’re at $101,000 of our goal, and last year we were at $102,000 [at this point in the season]. But we’re doing better than Ypsilanti, which had $6,100 last year and has $5,400 this year. And the county as a whole is down $8,800 or five percent from last year.

“We need to make three hundred thousand dollars in our kettle programs to keep what we do happening,” explains Williams, a twenty-year veteran serving her first tour in Ann Arbor. “It’s easily the single biggest part of our budget. If we make our goal, we will feed five hundred families. If we don’t, we will have to let some things go."

Like all Salvation Army sites, the twenty-five kettles in Ann Arbor are staffed from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturdays – Sundays are set aside for services – by a mix of paid and volunteer bell ringers. “Paid bell ringers are people who can’t get a job anywhere else,” says Williams. “Volunteers are people doing it for the love of it. And volunteers have been down this year.”

Down until now, that is. “We believe we had a good Saturday,” says Williams, “and we think the reason is because we had a lot of volunteers out there. They have a lot of enthusiasm, and every volunteer is all profit.”

Williams has faith they’ll hit their numbers. “Every year it’s like this, and every year

...continued below...


we get fearful, and every year God pulls us through. I do believe that when it’s all over at 3 o’clock on December 24, if we’re not there, we’ll get there. Because people will find out we did not make our goal – and they’re not going to want to see that, and they’re going to write checks after Christmas and then we will make our goal. It’s happened every time before and it’s going to happen again.

“Why? Because people care about those out there who don’t have food, who don’t have a job, who don’t have a home. They care because they know how close they are to being on the serving line themselves.

“And,” Williams concludes, “every time there’s been a recession, we have the best years – and the economy has gotten very bad this year.”    (end of article)

[Originally published in December, 2008.]

 

 
Print Comment E-mail
Community

Local profiles, stories from readers, and more.

>> Blogs

Bernie and Marvel Mayotte
Fostering love in their golden years

Make Way for Ducklings
Daring rescue from an Oak Valley sewer

Parking Structure Runaround
Question Corner May 2013

Birth Mother's Day
Celebrating both joy and grief

The Haiti Connection
Nursing foundation seeks support.

Florwet, Zeller, & Faul
April 2013 Fake Ad update

more community articles:  1 l 2 l 3 ... 25 >
read more stories here -> Marketplace  l  Culture  l  Community  l  News
ARCHIVE   l   CONTACT   l   INFO   l   PRIVACY   l   HELP   l   RSS FEEDS   l   SEND A TIP   l   LOG IN
©1998-2013 Ann Arbor Observer - All Rights Reserved
This river...
arborlist.com
 
 
arborweb.com