Friday, March 05, 2010

Atlanta's United Way Celebrates $79.3 Million

by Maria Saporta
Contributing Writer
Atlanta Business Chronicle
March 5, 2010

In the end, the 2009 campaign of United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta raised $79.3 million, less than 1.5 percent shy of its $80.5 million goal.

But given the economic struggles of the past year, United Way leaders were celebrating Thursday night when they heard the news.

Before announcing the campaign results, John Somerhalder, the 2009 campaign chair who is chairman and CEO of AGL Resources Inc. (NYSE: AGL), set the stage by preparing the crowd of several hundred that bad news was coming.

First, the goal was the same amount that United Way was able to raise in 2008.

“That was a bold and aggressive goal,” said Somerhalder, explaining that such a goal was important because the community’s needs were so great.

United Way knew other organizations were struggling in their fundraising efforts, often coming in with double-digit decreases in their campaigns.

The 2009 campaign had to stretch even more because in 2008, United Way had launched a one-time Critical Needs Campaign. That special campaign raised $3.7 million, which was included in the 2008 campaign numbers.

“We knew we weren’t going to ask for those (dollars) again,” Somerhalder said. That meant the campaign cabinet would have to work even harder to reach the goal.

Given all those odds, Somerhalder declared the 2009 campaign a success.

Publix Super Markets is one of the reasons metro Atlanta’s United Way did as well as it did. For the first time Atlanta’s history, one company -- Publix -- raised more than $5 million.

Somerhalder also recognized four companies that have been loaning executives to United Way for five decades or more -- Georgia Power Co., Genuine Parts Co. (NYSE: GPC), SunTrust Banks Inc. (NYSE: STI) and the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.

Milton Little, United Way’s Atlanta president, gave credit to Somerhalder for the successful campaign.

“Any time any of us were dodging bullets, John said, ‘We are going to get through this,’” Little said.

Later Little said United Way employees donated a total $173,152 to the campaign.

Toward the end of the program at the Loudermilk Center, Little said that normally would be the time for this upcoming year’s campaign chair would come on stage to accept the baton from last year’s campaign chairman.

But Little said that wouldn’t be possible this year because last year’s campaign chair was the same person as this year’s campaign chair. Somerhalder agreed to serve as campaign chair for a second year, the first time that has happened in the history of Atlanta’s United Way.

So Little called Somerhalder on stage to receive a couple of gifts. One gift was a boomerang, a toy that when thrown returns to its same spot.

“Thank you for returning,” Little told Somerhalder.

http://atlanta.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2010/03/01/daily75.html

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