aliciaerickson

How To Fundraise the Fair Way

LWR
As schools and fall activities start their momentum, so too does the need for funding. I spent many fall afternoons in my school days hauling a box of chocolates door to door in the name of a field trip or project, all while resisting the urge to eat them… sometimes successfully.

It is not common to think of where our chocolate bars come from. I did not even know what a cacao pod looked like until several years ago. Few people, including children, understand where or how these delicacies reach us. Yet there is a dark side to chocolate, ranging from fueling wars to child labor, with around 286,000 children working farms in the Ivory Coast alone. It is important that we not only consider what chocolate we grab for ourselves the store, but also the message we send our children out to fundraise with. Fundraising with Fair Trade chocolate both helps your local organizations in their endeavors while also supporting the hard-working cacao farmers. And using Fair Trade also presents the opportunity to educate people, including those selling the products, towards an alternative to the dark side of the chocolate industry.

For Fair Trade fundraising check out:

  • Equal Exchange Fundraising provides everything you need to get started. There is a template for permission slips and letters to other parents, press releases and posters for promotion. Their incentive programs include chocolate samples, coffee roaster tours, school presentations and the chance to win a trip to a cacao farming community, as well as a tiered structure ranging from $1,000-$5,000 with organic shirts, caps, etc. And don’t be locked into just chocolate: try offering coffee, tea, cocoa, dried cranberries or roasted walnuts to bring in funds.
  • The Lutheran World Relief Fundraising Kit offers Divine chocolate that is focused more towards faith-based fundraising, with great ideas on how to help people find connection between fair trade and their spirituality. They offer planning tools, posters, educational presentations to supplement chocolate.

The next time an organization you or your children are involved with wants to raise money, suggest the Fair Trade option and help farmers while bringing in your funds.

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3 Responses to “How To Fundraise the Fair Way”

  1. ILRF Says:

    Thanks for this great post, Alicia! It is very important for kids and their families here in the US to support children in cocoa growing countries by buying fair trade. We can also support children’s education and fair conditions for cocoa farmers around the world by pressuring the major chocolate companies to adopt fair policies. You can check out the International Labor Rights Forum (http://www.laborrights.org) for more information on child labor in the cocoa industry and you can send a letter to Nestle here: http://www.unionvoice.org/campaign/Nestle07.

    As Halloween approaches, keep checking the ILRF website and make sure to support fair trade!

  2. Daughter Says:

    I love this idea! I always hate the kids’ candy sales, because I know it supports a good cause, and yet it’s usually a worthless product. Worthless in the sense that the chocolate is expensive, and generally doesn’t taste very good. When I buy it, I only do so because I feel sorry for the kids.

    But change the scenario, make the chocolate not only really good (in taste), but also good in the ethics of its production, and I think many people will feel good all around about buying it.

  3. Miranda Paul Says:

    Great post, Alicia! We’ve also experienced an overwhelming number of teachers, parents, students and administrators looking for an option to source Fair Trade Fundraising ideas.

    Worldgoods Fair Trade offers more than just fair trade chocolate - we publish a fundraising catalog which gives schools access to over 100 fairly traded products from around the world. Worldgoods also offers Consignment Sales and eFundraising, so that schools can earn a percentage of sales back while engaging in a meaningful and educational fundraiser.

    More information about Worldgoods Fundraising programs can be read at http://www.worldgoodsgb.com/fundraising.html

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