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Brotherhood Fund Drive Propelled by Can-Do Spirit

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Times Staff Writer

The can, its white label adorned with clasped hands and the words “Yes I Can, “ looks out of place atop the graceful baby grand piano.

That’s why actress Kim Fields put it there.

Fields, 16, who has starred as Tootie on NBC’s “Facts of Life” for seven seasons, wants guests in the living room of her parents’ Burbank home to ask about the “Yes I Can” can.

Alternative to United Way

Creating opportunities to talk about charity in one’s own community, volunteering and self-respect are central to the “Yes I Can” campaign being launched today by the Los Angeles Brotherhood Crusade/Black United Fund, the largest of 15 black-run alternatives nationwide to the white-dominated United Way movement.

“I think it’s a great idea,” said Fields, the Brotherhood Crusade’s honorary chairwoman, “because like everything else the Brotherhood Crusade does, it is helping people help themselves, it is giving back to the community and those are key factors in making the Crusade work.”

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The “Yes I Can” cans also signify the Brotherhood Crusade’s effort to broaden its fund-raising techniques in the face of continued conflict with the United Way movement over access to workplace fund raising through payroll deduction, which widely is regarded as the most inexpensive way for charities to raise funds.

The local United Way consistently has opposed the Brotherhood Crusade’s efforts to get equal access to solicit workers for donations via payroll deduction. Workers in factories and offices where United Way has a monopoly on soliciting workers can designate their gifts to the Brotherhood Crusade, however.

Little Direct Solicitation

Eighteen years after its founding, the Brotherhood Crusade can solicit workers directly at only 12 government agencies, a handful of nonprofit organizations and one corporation, The Boys supermarket chain, which depends heavily on black families for business.

Today a luncheon at the Sheraton Premiere in Universal City will launch the Brotherhood Crusade’s “Yes I Can” campaign to get 1,000 middle-class and affluent black families to place “Yes I Can” cans in a prominent place in their homes.

Those families taking the cans will have to sign a pledge committing them to encourage friends to become givers and volunteers.

“I pledge to teach my children the value of giving to help one’s self and one’s people as a fundamental principle in their lives,” one part of the pledge reads, “for without understanding the value of helping one’s self there can be no real strength, dignity and motivation to go forward and help others.”

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Goal of $365,000

Each of the 1,000 families will be asked to put $1 per day in its can, helping meet a one-year goal of $365,000.

If the goal is met it would increase the Brotherhood Crusade’s cash contributions by about one-third in a single year.

In addition, organizers said, 2,500 cans will be distributed to merchants to place near cash registers. The Korea Town Development Assn. has agreed to place dozens of the cans, each with slogans printed in Korean.

“The problem is not getting black people to give,” Danny J. Bakewell, the Brotherhood Crusade president, said. “Black people give generously, but they don’t give to themselves. They give to organizations that are not controlled by the community and that often take money out of the community to benefit others at the expense of the community.”

Bakewell contends that the Los Angeles area United Way, which is seeking $86 million in pledges in its current campaign, will spend just $3 million this year on service to the black community.

However, the United Way Inc. disputes those figures. “United Way is an organization for the total community,” said Francis X. McNamara Jr., president of the Los Angeles area United Way, adding that “of the direct services rendered by United Way agencies some 22% were provided to citizens of the black community, based on data from an internal 1984 survey.”

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Various United Way services benefit everyone, McNamara said, and in addition the Red Cross and United Way’s 14 health partners also provide services “for which no statistics on ethnicity are maintained.”

United Way will allocate about $36 million to its 350 member agencies this year, indicating that with 22% going to the black community, nearly $8 million of that would directly benefit blacks.

United Way Inc., responding to internal debate over the adequacy of services to various areas of Los Angeles County and western San Bernardino County, has created a task force to examine expanding support of nonprofit agencies in these “underserved” areas. Much of the task force’s nearly completed work has focused on predominantly black areas, such as Compton.

Bakewell said the “Yes I Can” effort will focus on middle-class and affluent blacks and that he hopes, eventually, to broaden it to include Latinos and Asians as donors and as recipients of services.

Difference in Income

Census Bureau data show that, overall, the median income of black households is only 57% of the white households’ median income. But black married couples’ median income is 78% of the median income of white married couples.

Among black families in 1983, the Census Bureau reports, 4% had incomes greater than $50,000 and an additional 9.2% had incomes between $35,000 and $50,000.

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By adopting the “Yes I Can” approach, the Brotherhood Crusade is trying to reach those higher-income black families that do not work for government and, thus, can not be solicited directly at the workplace for contributions, Bakewell said.

Dana Alston, president of the National Black United Fund, the New York City office that represents the local black funds, said if the “Yes I Can” campaign works she expects it will be adopted by the other funds.

These black funds have been growing rapidly in recent years, largely as the result of growing success in winning the right to directly solicit government employees on behalf of black-run charities.

“In 1983, when there were 11 Black United Funds, pledges totaled $2.2 million,” Alston said. “In 1984, this grew to $3.1 million and, very conservatively, we project the final results for 1985 will be $3.6 million.”

More Charities

Since 1983, four new black funds--in Baltimore, Philadelphia, Phoenix and Portland, Ore.--were added, she said. New black funds will start within weeks, she said, in Chicago and Tampa, Fla., bringing the total to 17.

In addition to the black funds, more than 70 other alternative federated funds nationwide are raising money for charities serving women, the arts, health and social justice and international relief and development, according to Robert O. Bothwell, executive director of the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy in Washington, D.C.

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The 2,200 local United Ways raise 25 times as much as these alternative funds combined.

Bakewell, who is chairman of the Black United Fund, said about 23,000 people in Los Angeles County give to the Brotherhood Crusade via payroll deduction. McNamara, the United Way president, estimated that more than 800,000 people give, of whom more than 60,000 designate a specific charity.

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