• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
Report Title Price
Provider: ValuEngine, Inc.
$49.0
Provider: Market Edge
$10.0
Provider: Stock Traders Daily
$18.0
Provider: Pechala's Reports
$25.0
Provider: Stock Traders Daily
$300.0

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. NASDAQ delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.

UPDATE 1-U.S. texting raises $11 million for Haiti

Related Topics

Stocks

   

Fri Jan 15, 2010 6:35pm EST

* Mobile Giving Foundation has seen 10,000 texts/second

* Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile USA waiving texting fees (Adds updated figures on dollar donations)

By Nicole Maestri

SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 15 (Reuters) - Cellphone users in the United States have contributed more than $11 million to Haitian earthquake relief through text messages in what is being hailed as an unprecedented mobile response to a natural disaster.

The Mobile Giving Foundation called it a "mobile-giving record" for funds raised for a single cause. Donations are rising swiftly, it said, as former President Bill Clinton and other politicians urge the American people to give.

Jim Manis, chief executive officer of the foundation helping to manage cellphone donations, said it was receiving up to 10,000 text messages per second. The foundation said more than $11 million has been donated.

Cellphone users can donate $5 to Haiti-born hip-hop musician Wyclef Jean's Yele Haiti Earthquake Fund by texting the word "Yele" to 501501, or they can donate $10 to other nonprofit organizations, such as the American Red Cross, by texting the word "Haiti" to a specified number, like 90999.

The donation is charged to a user's cellphone bill.

The American Red Cross said it has received more than $9 million in donations from more than 900,000 mobile phone users.

"It's unprecedented that we've received this amount," said spokeswoman Nadia Pontif.

Jean's fund had raised $2 million via text messages, according to Give on the Go, Yele's mobile application service provider.

The giving is also being fueled by the popularity of websites like Facebook and Twitter, where users are urging one another to make donations using cellphones.

Wireless carriers Verizon Wireless (VZ.N), AT&T Inc (T.N), Sprint (S.N) and T-Mobile USA, a unit of Deutsche Telekom AG (DTEGn.DE), have waived fees for customers wishing to send mobile donations. Carriers are also letting users know they are not taking a cut of the donations.

"There are no text messaging fees and 100 percent of the $10 donation goes to the American Red Cross," Verizon said in a statement.

Manis said Mobile Giving is working with wireless carriers to decrease the lag time between when a cellphone user makes a donation and when the funds arrive at a charity. Donations can take 90 days to be delivered to a charity.

"Every carrier is working through a solution to push those funds out faster," Manis said.

U.N. disaster experts said at least 10 percent of housing in the Haitian capital was destroyed, making about 300,000 homeless, but in some areas 50 percent of buildings were destroyed or badly damaged.

An increasing number of corporations and celebrities have announced aid for the devastated country amid a clamor for help from victims of Tuesday's quake.

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt have donated $1 million from their foundation to Doctors Without Borders, which has been tending to victims of the quake.

Actor George Clooney will host a telethon on MTV next week to raise funds for the victims. The event will be broadcast on all MTV Network channels on Jan. 22. Clooney is expected to be joined by many pop music and movie stars. (Additional reporting by Christine Kearney and Sinead Carew in New York; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Comments

Jan 15, 2010 7:38pm EST

This is wrong in so many ways. How many of these are done by children who parents are the ones who pay the phone bills? Alot of people are going to contest these because they where not ok’d by parents or people who have plans with several people on them. The goverment will benefit from this in the form of taxes on the phone bills related to the text’s. They need to stop this now because all the money with being to to the Red Cross and others that are ran by people that are corrupt.

acman2k5 Report As Abusive
 
 
Jan 15, 2010 7:41pm EST

If they received 10,000 txt msg per second, the $11 million would have been raised in under two minutes – Reuters needs to check those numbers before reporting them blindly!

[two minutes = 120 seconds = 1.2 million txt msg = $12 million in donations ... I know it says "up to" and some donations are for $5, but the numbers don't add up]

Teaindc Report As Abusive
 
 
Jan 16, 2010 3:24pm EST

Another way you can donate to Haiti relief efforts is by going to Recarded.com’s Haiti Gift Card Donation page at https://www.recarded.com/DonateToHaiti. Here, you may donate your gift cards to help aid the people of Haiti. Your gift card will be immediately converted into cash and donated in your name to the American Red Cross Haiti Relief and Development Fund.

HaitiRelief Report As Abusive
 
 
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.

 

 
*We welcome comments that advance the story directly or with relevant tangential information. We try to block comments that use offensive language or appear to be spam and review comments frequently to ensure they meet our standards. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters.