Community | August 16, 2009 | 17 comments

"Clunkers" program slows car gifts to U.S. charities

Image
xiola
The popular "cash-for-clunkers" program is boosting U.S. auto sales and manufacturing but is also slashing donations to charities that rely on gifts of cars to fund social programs, charity officials say.

Volunteers of America and other charities that receive tens of thousands of cars each year said such donations have quickly fallen up to 12 percent -- and fear a 25 percent drop eventually, or over $100 million -- as owners rush to trade gas guzzlers for new fuel-efficient models while federal rebates last.

"We started seeing it right away in July" when the program began, said Jim Hartman, vice president of vehicle donations at Volunteers of America, a nationwide charity. "It varies by market, but there's been an 11 to 12 percent drop compared with last year."

"The cars I'm seeing cashed in as clunkers, like older SUVs, are absolutely the typical donation to us," he said.

The clunkers program gives consumers a U.S. government rebate of up to $4,500 for trading in older, inefficient vehicles for new, fuel-sipping ones. Washington scrambled early this month to add $2 billion when the popular program's initial $1 billion funding was quickly spent.

Rick Frazier, director of the car donation program at The Military Order of the Purple Heart, which assists U.S. veterans, estimates the $3 billion will result in 700,000 clunker trades.

Frazier said charities would normally receive 25 percent of those 700,000 cars and, at an average value of $600 each, they could be out $105 million over 24 months.

"That will be devastating," he said. "A lot of services will have to be cut."

HELPS VARIETY OF THE NEEDY

Over the last 20 years U.S. charities have started up car, airplane and boat donation programs they convert to cash that helps fund social services for the needy, including the elderly, the homeless, disabled vets and at-risk youths.

Volunteers of America and Purple Heart each get about 40,000 to 50,000 car donations a year. Many go to auction while others are sold at a discount to low-income Americans.

But the clunkers program is also having social benefits by jolting the U.S. economy and putting people back to work.

Ford Motor said last week the program has ignited sales, prompting it to reopen plants and increase third-quarter production by 18 percent to 495,000 vehicles, especially its fuel-efficient Focus and Escape models.

Officials fear the clunkers' impact will linger for six to 12 months as hundreds of thousands of trade-ins are squeezed into the summer months. Over the next year, Volunteers of America's car donation revenues could be cut 25 percent, Frazier said.

"People usually take their time shopping for a new car, inquiring how much their old vehicle might fetch as a trade in," Hartman said. "We wouldn't get them this week or next week but spread out over a year they'd come in."

Only clunkers still running are eligible for rebates. But charities are still getting "non-runners," or junk cars, that aren't eligible for the federal program.

Volunteers of America and Purple Heart have yet to alter their programs to inspire donations, officials said.

But Melwood, a Washington-area charity that helps people with disabilities, partnered with a popular restaurant chain to offer a $100 gift certificate to people who donate cars.

Under current law, donors get a tax deduction of up to $500 or the car's selling price if a charity sells the car.

But Hartman said he hopes Congress will approve a bill pending in the House of Representatives that promotes charitable donations of cars, boats or airplanes by allowing tax deductions of up to $2,500 or the item's appraised value.
  1. groups:
    Community,   Progressive America,   Current Democrats,   United States of America,   2 more
  2. tags:
    Charity Cash for Clunkers Clunkers
  3.     
    |

17 comments // "Clunkers" program slows car gifts to U.S. charities

  • 14nascar
    • 0
      14nascar  
    • Image
    • Good article on the cash for clunkers program. It was a good idea, but it was poorly executed. I think car donation programs will be ok. Donating your car to a charity is a good idea. The charity benefits and a needy person can get a car for transportation to and from work. We currently are accepting car donations at http://carshelpingveterans.org/

    • 2 years ago
  • Cars4Charities
    • 0
      Cars4Charities  
    • Car donation charities told the politicians c4c would hurt us. We asked that the c4c cars be donated to charity with the charity determing the fate of the car. The c4c cars in poor condition would be scraped. Those in good condtion would be given to a needy person or sold with the charity using the proceeds to fund their mission. Obviously, our concerns were not taken seriously.
      http://www.cars4charities.org

    • 2 years ago
  • unclecharlie
    • 0
      unclecharlie  
    • How about this one? A 1995 (or was it '85) Lotus Biturbo, with all of 18k on the odometer. The idiot who owned it traded it in for a Subaru. Now imagine the $$ this could have brought at auction! Or, no doubt, as a collector car, he would have got much more for it than the 3500 towards a new car. This car was reported to not have had so much as a scratch on it, and was babied. Now, this engine with 18k will be destroyed, and the rest of the car will be crushed. There are certainly some imbeciles who need to be......uh, chewed out.

    • 2 years ago
  • kcfoxie
    • 0
      kcfoxie  
    • unclecharlie:

      There are going to be some sad stories from idiots who don't know what they have. My grandmother traded a Lotus Elise for a Panel Wagen in the 60s, the Lotus was a wedding gift and unfit for a mother of two.

      People do stupid things. The dealership SHOULD have told the guy to sell it outright, or they should have refused it from the program.

      For all we know this car was the bane of this man's existence and to see it destroyed was all he wanted.

      The fact is; most of the vehicle traded in are not worth crying over.

    • 2 years ago
  • kcfoxie
  • timetide
    • 0
      timetide  
    • So charties are having trouble convincing people to donate during a recession? not to deny that this program is hurting donations a bit, but to lay the entire decline in car donations at the feet of the C.A.R.S. is retarded. There are several mitigating factors that have contributed to the situation, not to mention the already existing steady decline in car donations over the past couple of years.

    • 2 years ago
  • afloyd60
  • nazbags
    • 0
      nazbags  
    • The first time I heard of Cash for Clunkers my first thought was, "I wonder how this will affect charities?" At least the program is temporary, right?

    • 2 years ago
  • afloyd60
  • fdsooner
  • Cochiese
    • 0
      Cochiese  
    • They can give every American 18 and older 209 grand that's about 50 million total to solve this economic crisis. The economy would boom for less than 1 billion. Wasn't the 1st bail out 780 billion or something?

    • 2 years ago
  • FireEyedBoy
  • hunzedog
  • onemalefla
  • xiola
  • MartiO
    • 0
      MartiO  
    • Thanks to the provisions of this plan which include scrapping useable parts....starters, alternators and such....it is also killing off the secondary market for used parts. I guess China needs them worse.

      Even if the clunkers charities receive are still running....they won't be for long as not only are the second markets shriveling up, but so are the markets for new parts for older vehicles. They want those off the road an not necessarily for gas mileage concerns.

      By the way.....all those "new cars" have gps installed. Think about Smart grid here.

    • 2 years ago
  • kcfoxie
    • 0
      kcfoxie  
    • MartiO:

      Are you seriously defending 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999 Ford Explorers as being important to our way of life? Because that's what your saying.

      We never needed them. Let them be crushed.

    • 2 years ago
more from Community:

top videos