Off Topic £3

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It also gets on my nerves when the office try and do something. 'Give £2 because some bloke in Finance you don't know is doing a bungee jump'. 'Put some change in the envelope for Deidre who just had a baby'. 'Colin has just lost his leg in a car crash so we're doing a whip round'. **** off, particularly if it's for someone who earns much more than me.

Our staff fund for our IT group works really well and cuts out all those annoying distracting visits. I recall when the uncle of a senior staff in another area passed away, our director suggested that a donation be made from our staff fund - it went to a vote, I voted no, but majority ruled for a $30 amount.

One time another group invited us to share someone's' birthday cake and on arrival we were then informed that if we wanted a slice of cake we had to pay a buck - can you imagine!

Now for one of our own, whose 10 year old daughter fought brain cancer over a 4 year period, we raised $6,000 to help defer frequent family travel costs away for treatments. After her death earlier this year we made a $250 donation to the Canadian Cancer Society in her name, and gave our colleague the receipt to use as an income tax credit.

Another close colleague & neighbour (only 53, super fit guy, with two young daughters) was diagnosed with a brain tumour in early September, it was removed, but biopsy showed it was an aggressive malignant stage 4 tumour, and he died just 3 weeks after surgery before chemotherapy & radiation treatments were scheduled to start. We raised $2,000 in just one week to help cover anticipated family cost associated with his illness. Fortunately he had mortgage insurance plus an additional 3X annual salary life insurance at work, so at least his wife is well provided for.
 
Watch out for those doing a walk of the Great Wall of China - or the like - "for charity".

I have seen people saying that they are trying to raise £XXX for a certain charity, but when you look at the charity's website you find out that the £XXX is the cost of travel, etc, which needs to be paid for by the walker.

The charity only benefits if they raise more than that, otherwise you are just paying for someone to go on a jolly to China.
That's exactly what I'm getting at, for China in your post, read Bolivia in mine.
 
Yes, that sort of stuff can be somewhat annoying when people roam from office to office in your building trawling for donations, sponsorship etc, since you're really put on the spot. I don't even have enough money to help support three of my kids in university - maybe I should try for a quick whip round?

One thing that works really well for our relatively small IT group (within a much larger organization) is our staff fund. Each of us (15 people) contributes $1/week, so $52/yr x 15 = $780 and this pool of money supports the following items within our group during the year, following a set of guidelines:-

- Retirement gifts, or leaving for another job ($10/yr served max $100) + paid lunch
- Baby gifts (max $50, twins $100 - none so far!)
- Summer students paid lunch when departing after terms
- Donations to a cause (Canadian Cancer Society, Heart & Stroke Foundation etc.) when a colleague's family member passes away
- A birthday cake per month (even if no birthday), enjoyed at a 30 min branch break (we had one today) - good for morale

Other requests presented for donations are voted on as a group. It's really nice not to always have someone showing up on your doorstep to donate towards this & that, especially if you're not that close with them, other than sharing the same building.

If the fund has a large accumulated surplus come end of year we sometimes organize a paid Christmas bash together paid out of the fund ($600 one year I recall).
Seems an excellent set up you have Kilburn, fair to all.
 
I didn't actually notice that you linked the quote TIME, good stuff Oscar. I saw this in a gallery last week

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The Portrait of Dorian Gray by Ivan Albright. It was about the worst thing in there (to my taste). But I also saw this Renoir

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which is incredibly familiar from chocolate boxes and a certain type of greeting card, and I had always thought just horribly twee. In the flesh it is hugely striking, really beautiful. I also resolved my Monet/Manet confusion. Manet is very good, but Monet is the one I really like, especially his Thames landscapes. I think...

Sorry for straying off topic....
 
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I do work for a local Cancer Charity in Dorset - LEAFCharity .com. I DJ and event plan (as well as hold down a full time job), and I will basically provide entertainment and dress a room in a hotel accordingly for their annual ball. I don't charge for my time - I give this willingly as their is a personal connection as I lost a relative with
Leukaemia.
Charity is all down to the individual - sometimes the greatest gift you can ever give is your time
 
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