Features Jun 8, 2011 at 4:00 am

Tell Street Canvassers to Stop Bothering You Without Saying a Word

Comments

1
All the ones that hang out in front of Whole Foods on Westlake have been pretty non-aggressive so far. Let's hope it stays that way.
2
I've found that a simple "no thanks" usually works. If it doesn't the subsequent "get the fuck away from before I hit you in the fucking face" does the trick.
3
The thing is, if you give money to them, yes, only 10% goes to the charity. But the other 90% goes into the paycheck of the canvasser, or the company they work for. This money is spent on education, housing, food, clothing, transportation and other vital living expenses for the worker or the company's other employees and owners. Maybe that's not the absolute best thing to do with your spare change, but it's not harmful.

On the other hand, when you give money to addicts and crazies on the street, 100% of that goes to buy booze and drugs. It perpetuates substance abuse, crime, and violence. You're literally helping to kill the person you're giving money to.

But childish middle class suburbanites like Dominic Holden, angry because their parents were too ordinary I guess, think giving money to somebody with a job is uncool. Productive members of society are all "tools of The Man". Or some hippie bullshit.

Ah! But if they smell like piss and are hell bent on destroying themselves! That's cool! It's like some William S. Burroughs type shit there, brah!
4
Dominic is dead on...particularly on Capitol Hill. I feel like wearing a badge when I walk down Broadway that says "I gave at the office" but I don't think that would dissuade them.
5
How about just saying "sorry" instead of handing them a righteous little card?
6
@3 "On the other hand, when you give money to addicts and crazies on the street, 100% of that goes to buy booze and drugs. It perpetuates substance abuse, crime, and violence. You're literally helping to kill the person you're giving money to."

That's why I never give money to panhandlers.

I always give them booze or drugs... AMERICAN owned and manufactured booze and drugs.

No one wants to perpetuate foreigners and their unAMERICAN activities, and I feel good knowing that the poor, desperate person I am supplying up, won't accidentally be sending our money and jobs overseas, supporting their habit.

I feel good about stimulating our economy and doing my part to make the often rough life of various street people more comfortable.
7
@3 Sorry if I donate to charity, I actually want to DONATE to that charity. It isn't 'hippie bullshit,' it's called common sense. It completely defeats the purpose when 90% on my donation goes towards someone's salary. That sort of business model is inefficient and potentially unethical for charities to follow. There are better ways to raise money.

I think the cards are brilliant, and I can't wait to use them at the Broadway QFC. Those canvassers have the doors completely surrounded from sunup to sundown. Sometimes I just want to break into a sprint to get past them.
8
Somehow I think the fact the Dom gets all worked up about saying no says more about him than it does about the canvassers.

Seriously, passing out cards like that makes you a grade-A douche crouton. Saying no doesn't make you a bad person.
9
This is a consequence of neo-Liberal economic policies and the ceding of government functions to NGOs. If our government isn't doing charity/welfare/social safety net programs, they become a business. The cards aren't going to have an impact; only structural changes are going to do much of anything.

@3: Actually, plenty of the money you give to non-corporate beggars goes to food, housing, clothing, etc. There's an easy test: offer the person the thing they claim to want directly. If someone asks you for food money, offer to buy them a sandwich. If someone asks you for bus faire, offer them one of the bus tickets you carry around for just such a contingency. In my experience, about half the people asking for money really need it for food or travel.
10
@3, good argument if the canvassers are saying, "Do you have a second to spread capital throughout the local markets and offer employment support to me?" But they are not. And not only is your argument amazingly bad, you're kind of a dick about it.

@9: if they ask me to save the whales, should I give them a whale? What about civil liberties? What the hell are you trying to say?
11
Yeesh. I'm with you. The only people I hate more than street canvassers are meter maids.
12
@3, you say "the other 90% goes into the paycheck of the canvasser" as if that's a GOOD thing. In other words, they're panhandling -- only panhandlers get to keep more of the money I give them.

I still don't see what's wrong with a muttered "fuck off" as you brush past them. They deserve neither respect nor pity.
13
the proper response to both bums & canvassers is a smiling "not today", with direct eye contact and moving legs.
14
These Passive-Agressive Confrontation Cards(tm) are pretty douchey. I have no problem saying "No" or "I hate trees" or "Nancy Reagan told me pot is bad" or just ignoring them.

It's not like these people accost you, tie you to a lamppost go through your pockets.

Passing them a card feels...snobby. Bourgeois. Douchey.
15
Their subcontracted interest in the cause goes as far as me giving them my check or credit card number.

Every single one I've asked about getting materials from or a call from someone else higher up in the organization has rejected the request. They don't care about getting money, they care about getting their cut, right then.

Fuck 'em.

@3: "This money is spent on education, housing, food, clothing, transportation and other vital living expenses for the worker or the company's other employees and owners."

Yes, all wasteful and unnecessary overhead. This is an outdated business model and needs to be stopped. I'm paying for a cause, and I intend for 100% of it to go to ACTUAL EMPLOYEES, not 92% of it to go to people who train chuggers, who get a small percentage of that still.
16
On the other hand, if "fuck you" is too strong for you, I support the idea of handing out these cards -- only print them as displayed, the size of postage stamps.
17
@10, you misunderstand the point @9 is trying to make. Note the phrase, "non-corporate panhandlers," which is to say, bums. They are talking specifically about homeless folks asking for a handout. Those aren't the kind of folks asking if you have a minute for civil liberties. And, he's entirely right. I often carry extra snacks for those with "need $ for food" signs. If they refuse the food, they get nothing.

I'm surprised at how coherent your response to @3 was, and yet you somehow completely missed @9's point.
18
@12

What part of "Maybe that's not the absolute best thing to do with your spare change, but it's not harmful" did you not understand? I'll say it for a third time because a lot of people are being dense here: Maybe that's not the absolute best thing to do with your spare change, but it's not harmful.

It's incorrect to say the panhandler gets to keep the money you give them. Their dealer keeps it. Or the fortified liquor industry keeps it. Panhandler is only holding on to it long enough to walk a half a block to where they can get high. Which is harmful.

The chuggers don't do anything harmful with the money. It's a big difference.
19
In the 1940s, Pepsi adopted a red, white, and blue logo to support America's war effort. In the late 70's, Woody Allen adopted a Korean girl to get a date. These days, I'd like to adopt absolutely no one. So how come whenever I go downtown or to the University District, I'm being asked to save the unwanted children?

You've seen these clowns: they wear matching shirts, carry matching binders, and congregate in a small area. You can't just ignore/say no to one of these people, you have to do it to THREE of them. They have yet to master the art of camoflage and/or subterfuge. If insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result, then I think we can legally straitjacket the third member of the team who witnesses me brushing off their two compatriots. Hey, last in line: You're not special. That's why you're a third-party panhandler.

Last week I'm doing my usual good job of avoiding the hell out of these mercenary do-gooders when the 19 year old guy on annoyance duty said to me: "I like your sweater. It reminds me of 'The Brave Little Toaster.'"

OK, seriously, who says that to another human being in an attempt to start a conversation? Luckily, I ended it fast: "That's the worst pick-up line anyone has ever used on me." For some reason, he continued to try to talk to me but it was hard to make out what he was saying with all of the walking away from him I was doing.

Here's a life lesson for those of you donning the red jacket or the blue t-shirt or whatever stupid color is coming next: We, as Americans, love children. I don't, but other Americans do. But - and here's the key, so lean in close and write this down - only the ones we make ourselves, like little your cretin seed Tyler Jr or my insufferable niece Brandy. But those little brown children covered in flies sitting in mud puddles playing with medical waste? Unless your last name is Jolie or you're the aformentioned Mr. Allen, not a chance. And even if we did, we're still climbing out of this recession. I should be out there with a clipboard and a jacket collecting money for me - I have mock turtlenecks to buy.

At least the job has a turnover rate matched only by street level drug dealers and whoever Steve Raible has to pay for an under-the-table handjob.

(I originally posted this on Yelp, but it deserves a reposting here.)

20
@18 How do you know those assholes at Westlake don't go straight from cashing their paychecks to bars or drug dealers?
21
i appreciate the fact that it seems they only hire pretty hottie hotties, though. maybe if they were nakeder, they'd make money? (hee..."maybe".)
23
I support all of the chuggers' causes. I do not support the chuggers. Better, far better, to donate directly to your charities of choice. If you're a wimp, hand out the token. If you're an adult, say "no" and keep moving. Because they seem human they do deserve slightly more respect than a piece of junk mail or spam.
24
@3, the "other 90%" does NOT go into the paycheck of the canvasser. Understand that the companies that many of these canvassers – the intermediaries, or middlemen, if you will – are typically FOR profit groups. So maybe 10% goes to the charity, and maybe another small percentage goes to that chugger that you'd cross the street to avoid, but this is most definitely capitalism getting in the way of charity.
25
@13 That's what I do too, and most of the time it works like a charm.
26
@18, harmful to whom? Why is it your business what people do with the money they make? How is a panhandler buying a sandwich harmful while a canvasser buying a sandwich is somehow saving the world?

Neither one of them is adding any value to the world. Of course, the canvassers are 100% white and middle class, so that's all right then. They don't need to work. They just deserve our money for existing.
27
@24, exactly. These canvassers ARE committing harm, because they're taking money that is intended for someone else -- the charities.
28
@19,

Soon-Yi's adoptive parents are Mia Farrow and Andre Previn.
29
@24, another harm: how many people refuse to give to, say, Planned Parenthood or World Wildlife Fund or whomever because they're sick of being harassed on the street and associate the charity with the canvassers? Considering how tiny the amount of canvassed money that goes to the charity is, it wouldn't surprise me if they turned out to be a net negative on donations.
30
I think the current tactics of canvassers has become incredibly counter productive. Up until recently, I'd at least talk to someone, but if I'm going to give money I'll give it directly to an organization. However, things have become so saturated up in my neighborhood (Capitol Hill) that I get pestered more for my "time" than my "money". I've actually taken to avoiding Broadway while out on a walk because of the ridiculous amount of canvassers on every corner and at all places in between. Is it just me, or has that job become the new telemarketer?
31
"Based on a similar card in Portland" isn't much of a citation.

Especially since you copped the design and much of the wording it might be nice to cite the source ;)

Just click the first link after googling: wkstudio+canvasser

32
I hope the tide ebbs on this. For now, charities are going full-out on this simply because it still works for their bottom line compared to other fundraising methods, even factoring in payments to the canvassing companies. Once this stops working for them they'll drop it from their fundraising strategies quick enough.
http://www.charityfacts.org/fundraising/…

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_fund…
33
28: Getting to third base trumps adoption any day of the week, or so my Uncle Jerry always said.
34
@18: "It's incorrect to say the panhandler gets to keep the money you give them. Their dealer keeps it. Or the fortified liquor industry keeps it. Panhandler is only holding on to it long enough to walk a half a block to where they can get high. Which is harmful.

The chuggers don't do anything harmful with the money. It's a big difference."

Chuggers don't spend their money on liquor and pot? Bullshit.
35
Alright. I think I have some insight into this. Because this is a job I've briefly held. I have, in fact, been "that guy."
It's a shitty job. I wasn't too good at it and consequently lasted about a week. I don't blame anyone for not talking to canvassers, especially if you pass them every day. But a self-righteous little card? Seriously? Most of these folks are already having a bad day. Just walk by.
A card like this isn't going to change the fundraising policies of anyone; it's simply a way to feel smug.
36
Being Assertive is not something Western Washingtonians seem to be good at.

It's not hard to avoid chuggers. When they ask, say no. Not, "maybe..." Not "well..." Whatever you do, don't raise an eyebrow.

Just look em right in the eye and say:
"I don't have any money for your organization."

"I don't want to talk to you" also works well.

Or my favorite - when they make eye contact, keep your eyebrows lowered, raise either index finger, and wag it back and forth.

If you can't do these things, perhaps being mobbed by chuggers is the universe's way of teaching you to be more assertive.

It's a free country, even for chuggers - any rule restraining speech inevitably creates a risk of abuse. I bet a lot of politicians would like rules banning pesky, invasive reporters from courthouse and legislature steps.
37
I feel like canvassers have gotten less obnoxious in recent years, and I walk past them every day in Berkeley. Perhaps its just because I'm older and wiser and I don't have "mark" written on my forehead anymore so they don't bother. But I don't support any form of business that's based on the sucker model.
38
Holden is a scaredy cat and can't deal with the big adults.
39
I read up until #18, and then got disillusioned up with the ratio of moral certainty to personal experience in this thread.

None of those comments mentioned having any direct experience either working as a street canvasser or panhandling. If that's true, a lot of you (with a few gracious exceptions: thanks #9, #35, et al) are drawing sweeping generalisations about things you don't know much about.

The cliche about walking a mile in another person's shoes applies here. (In case someone asks, I do indeed have personal experience with both canvassing and panhandling. I don't think that makes me qualified to make generalisations either.)
40
I would also point out that there are multiple third-party organizations that employ people to stump for charities. I can only speak to my experience, but I was explicitly told not to get in people's way, follow, harass or do anything save ask people if they had a second. Apparently a couple of the other companies encourage their folks to take a really aggressive tactic.
We were told-- as a matter of policy-- not to be overaggressive, use guilt, etc. Obviously, every canvasser had their own methods ("hey! I like your shirt!") but that's to be expected. If you were seen harassing, yelling, blocking, following, you got in trouble.
Furthermore, at least where I worked, we weren't paid on commission; we were paid hourly. The charities hire the company to stump for them. The donations people sign up for go something like 92 cents on the dollar directly to Red Cross/Planned Parenthood/Save the Children/___. How it breaks down beyond that, I wasn't around long enough to find out.

41
I'm handing these out to the next Girl Scout troop loitering with their damn cookies when I'm trying to get in & out of a supermarket.
43
@26

It's my business because the chuggers and the street crazies are both asking me for my money. Isn't that the whole point of Dominic's little game here? To say that one kind of street solicitor deserves your money and another kind doesn't? Because of where the money goes?

And this on top of the prior crusade present company carried out to protect the right of people who smell bad to harass you on the sidewalk.

I simply don't get how if they smell bad they should be allowed to harangue you for money with impunity but if they shit indoors and shower every morning then Something Must Be Done. The only explanation I have for the double standard is that one is "anarchy" (silly urban hipster "anarchy" I mean) and the other is square.

I'd ban all panhandling if I could. But if any kind should be tolerated it's the non-mentally ill, drug-and-alcohol free kind kind.
44
I've had people plugging certain political causes follow me down the street even after I've told them I'm Canadian.

Them: Do you support health care for everyone?

Me: Yeah, but I'm Canadian, so ... (walking away)

Them: What?! You're just saying that! (following me)

Me: No, I'm not, I'm really Canadian.

Them: Well, can't you still vote here?

Me: No. I'm not a citizen. Don't you know your own rules?

Them: Well, can't you just --

Me: Fuck off!
45
I'd like to take a moment and grind my axe for a moment on the biggest dipshit out there with a clipboard. Yup, I'm talking to you Shay. You 6' tall read bearded, beanie wearing fucktard. How 'bout you size me up from a half block out again, continuing to dance back and forth across the sidewalk like I'm going to try and score a goal for commuting Seattlites while you protect some invisible net for Children International ... brah.

I've been kind and said "no" like the naive folks here think will work. I've had rational conversations with you explaining that you're in fact violating section 4 of Seattle Municipal Code 12A.12.015 and that your tactics are piss-poor, short sighted, and are enraging our city. I've changed my commute to avoid you and your clipboard toting guilt guild only to see you on entirely new blocks. I've told you to fuck off a dozen times. I've told your friends to do the same. I've stood 6" from you and told you to try and remember my face ... you see it almost every day so it can't be that hard ... and no my name's not Sam, despite introducing myself to you three times now. I've written to your shitty organization, Dialoge Direct, and a host of charities who employ you (as well as loads who don't) to call out your "shake my hand brah, just shake my hand" antics. I could give half a fuck that your organization raised $91M last year, because you're doing it at the expense of others who are trying to do good in their own world and are left with an awful taste in their mouth heading home from work.

Shay, you're an asshole and a blight on our city. The only way that I'd ever give to your organization, and by your organization I mean Children International, ever again is if I received a personal letter saying that they fired you and the rest of Dialogue Direct for misrepresenting them, for jumping in front of thousands of people daily like some coked up hippie with a hard-on for shaking hands and manipulating people with decent souls. You are the Moby Dick of dipshits in the Westlake "gauntlet" ... the Molly Moon's Planned Parenthood folks are minnows compared to you and the rest of your company.

Feel proud for your notoriety for a moment, after all, you personally got a shout out in the comments on The Stranger from someone who loathes seeing you every day! You've made a difference in lives! Childish of me to solo out this one chugger from all of his peers? Maybe, but so is being an absolute douche for your job by pissing off the city that feeds you. Passive aggressive? Gotta go with no there since I've told you directly to fuck off numerous times, Shay. Think of this a a PSA for other commuters who haven't had the pleasure of meeting you.

With that I raise a glass to you Shay. Rain or shine, sleet or piles of hobo shit, you're out there 5 days a week ... sometimes more ... standing up for your 1st Amendment right to speak your mind as an asshole cloaked in a charity vest with a clipboard. Here's to livin' the dream, sir. See ya tomorrow Shay, and no, I won't shake your hand, brah.
46
@13 has it. "No thanks," "sorry man," something along those lines, nothing more, don't break stride, don't make eye contact, don't answer further questions. It's not naive, it works for almost any street situation, you just have to remember that protecting a stranger's high opinion of you and your liberal cred is not your priority today.

If you've never lived in a city or a time where walking on the sidewalk was potentially perilous, I understand that you are having to build a new set of skills here, but really, have you never?
47
Thank you, Dominic.

Just this afternoon, I was heading to the Columbia City farmers' market. At the entrance I saw ... THEM. I saw three vultures circling, then I stopped counting. I went somewhere else.

(Oddly enough, one of the somewheres else was a Stranger newsbox where I discovered your article. I will certainly cut out the convenient "NO" cards you have provided.)

(Also, sorry to any farmers or other vendors who didn't get my money today, either. You were the real losers today.)
48
Thank you for these. I'm tired of smiling and saying no, or ignoring them, and being chased down the sidewalk anyway. If they'd like to wave pamphlets in my face as I walk to the grocery store, they can handle having one of these waved in their face.
49
During the last election I had some girl get all pushy with me about her cause. I was wearing a t-shirt from one of the many firefighter charity events I've been in. She got all chummy on how her parents were firefighters up north somewhere. Then she got all bitchy when I DARED to say that I would read up on her ballot measure online before signing. I'll accept information if I choose to talk to a canvasser. But pull that pushy, indignant, down right hostile crap and I'm done. And try to play the " my so-and-so is a firefighter" as a way of telling me I have to support your cause? Big F U.
50
Where's Mark Sidran when we need him?
51
@14: This.

These cards are completely douchey, and about as passive-aggressive-Seattle a thing as I've ever seen. If you feel too important/busy to just say no, don't say anything at all. Jesus.
52
@49. "Then she got all bitchy when I DARED to say that I would read up on her ballot measure online before signing"

Ohmigod they HATE that. Most won't even give me their website when I ask. My standards for giving are pretty low with regard to street canvassers: I only expect them to be true supporters of their cause, as in genuine. I'm really very idealistic I guess.
53
But I agree that the cards are a bit much. I'd feel weird when it came down to handing one out. Don't think I could do it.
54
Street fundraising is cost effective way for NGOs and charities to build up a base of sustainable donors. Unfortunately, there are some fundraisers who aren't professional. Thankfully, they don't last long.

That being said, not every canvasser works for the same fundraising consultancy. There are several different organizations in Seattle that fund raise on the street level. Not every consultancy pays on commission. There are fundraisers who genuinely love the charity they represent.

The whole shebang is more complicated than it looks. A lot of time and effort is spent training fundraisers - we work closely with the charities because we love them. We love what we do.

What's more is that there may be dozens of us, but there are thousands of you people that we have to deal with daily. 99% of the people putzing around Seattle are amazing. The people who are completely and perpetually miserable are few and far between. I am a big advocate of reminding my coworkers to not push people or take anything personally. You never know what kind of day someone is having; the person who just told me to go get fucked could have just lost his or her job, or had a death in the family, etc.

Further, we help people out all of the time. I've returned wallets full of money that people have dropped, cell phones, given people directions, etc. I've witnessed a homeless man getting stomped by some awful person and given a police report. I've also been spit at for saying "Hello!" to someone, had disparaging remarks made about my body, had coffee thrown on me, and lots of other extra lame stuff.

Saying that you get "accosted" daily is a gross exaggeration of some personal slight that you've managed to conjure up in your paranoid little brain. If anything, canvassers ACTUALLY get accosted. That's not the point.

It's egregiously unjust to pigeon hole fundraisers together. We're not all bad. Most of us are pretty awesome. Our work actually does have a direct impact on the world, and that's our biggest motivator to do this daily.

Fnarf, you actually have no idea what goes into fundraising on a person to person basis. Generally, canvassing is an extremely cost effective way for charities to generate funds. Consultancies are a part of preexisting fundraising budgets. Every charity has one. When you sign up on the street, every penny of what you give right there goes to the charity. Every penny. I'd go further into detail but I doubt that you'd be able to understand it.

So, anyway, Seattle. Stay fresh. Y'all are wonderful, entertaining, and provide so many amazing conversations and experiences. If you've had a sour experience, I apologize on behalf of the fundraisers who strive to be respectful. Cheers! :)

55
Street fundraising is cost effective way for NGOs and charities to build up a base of sustainable donors. Unfortunately, there are some fundraisers who aren't professional. Thankfully, they don't last long.

That being said, not every canvasser works for the same fundraising consultancy. There are several different organizations in Seattle that fund raise on the street level. Not every consultancy pays on commission. There are fundraisers who genuinely love the charity they represent.

The whole shebang is more complicated than it looks. A lot of time and effort is spent training fundraisers - we work closely with the charities because we love them. We love what we do.

What's more is that there may be dozens of us, but there are thousands of you people that we have to deal with daily. 99% of the people putzing around Seattle are amazing. The people who are completely and perpetually miserable are few and far between. I am a big advocate of reminding my coworkers to not push people or take anything personally. You never know what kind of day someone is having; the person who just told me to go get fucked could have just lost his or her job, or had a death in the family, etc.

Further, we help people out all of the time. I've returned wallets full of money that people have dropped, cell phones, given people directions, etc. I've witnessed a homeless man getting stomped by some awful person and given a police report. I've also been spit at for saying "Hello!" to someone, had disparaging remarks made about my body, had coffee thrown on me, and lots of other extra lame stuff.

Saying that you get "accosted" daily is a gross exaggeration of some personal slight that you've managed to conjure up in your paranoid little brain. If anything, canvassers ACTUALLY get accosted. That's not the point.

It's egregiously unjust to pigeon hole fundraisers together. We're not all bad. Most of us are pretty awesome. Our work actually does have a direct impact on the world, and that's our biggest motivator to do this daily.

Fnarf, you actually have no idea what goes into fundraising on a person to person basis. Generally, canvassing is an extremely cost effective way for charities to generate funds. Consultancies are a part of preexisting fundraising budgets. Every charity has one. When you sign up on the street, every penny of what you give right there goes to the charity. Every penny. I'd go further into detail but I doubt that you'd be able to understand it.

So, anyway, Seattle. Stay fresh. Y'all are wonderful, entertaining, and provide so many amazing conversations and experiences. If you've had a sour experience, I apologize on behalf of the fundraisers who strive to be respectful. Cheers! :)
56
Then there's the tactic of shuffling along in your old clothes, hands in pockets.... when you're approached by a canvasser, ask 'em for some spare change. If there are three of them, you've got three shots at it.
57
If you're going to hand out cards, make them directions to a nearby homeless shelter. Give them to chuggers and panhandlers alike. If you want to hand out a sandwich at the same time, no harm done.
58
Why not just carry pennies? When you get a particularly obnoxious chugger, hand him a penny and keep walking. Then he can't hassle you for refusing to donate.
59
True Ladies and Gentlemen always strive to make others feel comfortable. It's a total breach of etiquette to introduce oneself to random strangers on the street. I just glare at canvassers who offer to shake hands like they are being classless, tacky and presumptuous. They leave me alone.
60
I used to treat chuggers with the same respect as I'd treat a homeless person, but that was back at the start when they were still a rare sight. Now you would be hard pushed to walk 30 minutes across London without being accosted for three or four causes, and the level of aggression is far higher.

So now I treat them the same way I treat street scammers - the people who claim to have 'lost their wallets' but who curiously seem to manage to lose them every friday and saturday nights. London has a lot of them too, and they don't get eye contact, they don't even get their existence acknowledged - I just step around them, like dog dirt.
61
@45 OH GOD, did I laugh!!!

I hate this guy too!! He stakes out one of the courners right outside my building, can't even get a smoke in edgewise! Though not as much as I hate Fake-Irish-Accent douchebag. You must work downtown like me. No matter how many times I talk to that douche, he never remembers me. And I see him nearly every day. *BARF*
63
Speaking as a former canvasser, I think there's an issue missing here.

The progressive world has not institutionalized the critical importance of making quality entry-level jobs available to passionate young people, so as to not lose them to jobs that will suck away their passion in the corporate world. (Conservatives have done this extremely effectively; it's part of the right-wing explosion over the past few decades.)

Canvassing jobs are always available in abundance. Progressive young adults with a heart flock to them as they'll make more than Starbucks and they'll get that "I believe in what I do" feeling, even though truthfully, the vast, VAST majority of canvassers (in my experience) would jump at the chance to get a stable office job with benefits or a compelling fieldwork opportunity, actually doing the work instead of asking for the money to do it.

Most of our organizations are chronically underfunded and would not survive without doing everything in the book to try to bring in the bucks. There are many ways of fundraising, and where I work, we use almost all of them - not canvassing, though, but it's actually on the table as a possibility.

How I wish we had a few more angel billionaires in the mix who committed large amounts of money to awesome NGOs on the condition that it be used specifically to create new entry-level positions to give the graduating generation a stable door into the world they want to serve.

As it stands, looks like we're stuck with people spending five hours straight asking for money and trying desperately to make quota, while inspiring all kinds of complicated, frustrating emotions in the people who avoid them or turn them down.

My job filled me with constant panic, but it was the best door in to better work that I had at the time, plus I made some of the best friends of my life there. I was also utterly surprised by the generosity of some people. I did actually have the experience of knocking on a door, being welcomed, and apparently being exactly the right person to give the woman I spoke to the final push to sponsor her fourth child (big giver). It was kind of amazing and unforgettable.

That said? Now that I have a stable, awesome nonprofit job with benefits, I would never, ever, EVER go back to workin' the clipboard. But it's only stable because we do every damn thing we can manage to raise money, and yeah, so long as any method actually works, we and other NGOs will go with it.
64
Standing with TB here. I haven't seen the Seattle chuggers, but I worked for one of the better canvassing outfits in Raleigh for a few months because I couldn't get anything better as a fresh college grad in November 2008.

Maybe most of your canvassers are white, but let me tell you, most aren't middle class. 20% of the canvassers I worked for were homeless. Canvassing is the best paying job you can get around here without a permanent address. Plus, since some fraction of your coworkers really do give a shit about the issues, you can usually find someone who'll help you cash your paycheck at a real bank or let you store your good shoes in the office so they don't get stolen at night.

It isn't cushy, either. Every canvasser has a quota. Fail to meet your quota 3 days in any month, and you are fired on the spot. Even if you miss your quota because your team leader misread the damn map and set you canvassing in the middle of Tea Party turf, where you not only get insulted, but also spit on and kicked. Most canvassers make $8/hour for their work.

The kids with college degrees are put in salaried "leadership" positions with an effective wage of $5.10/hour. These folks can be required to move across the country at 1 week's notice and their own expense, according to the whim of the company. Regularly moving canvassers with college degrees is an established tactic to prevent canvassers from building up support networks they might use to resist.

So why are there so many more canvassers lately? Cause there's a lot more people without jobs, taking the best thing they can get.

Canvassers know that their organizations divert a significant fraction of the donations into executive salaries, but can't admit it or they get fired. They know you don't want to give them money. They wouldn't give themselves money if they were you. But they have got to do anything they can to get you to give, or else they don't make the rent.

Best way to get a canvasser to leave you alone is to offer them a job, or even a job lead. I would have flung my clipboard on the ground on the spot.

Otherwise, save your condescending cards and keep walking. They already know.
65
@9

That's an inane experiment. Just because they take the food or bus tokens doesn't mean they wouldn't prefer cash to get wasted with. If that's all you're offering, why the hell not take it?

Next time, give them a choice between food or money. Or booze or bus tickets. Get back to me on that.

At the very least, if you give them a bus token, and instead of going and getting on the bus they stand there and ask more people for cash, well, that's your answer.
66
@29

When you enable street crazies and addicts by giving them money on the street, you're taking money out of the pockets of real charities that actually help the homeless and substance abusers. Serious harm.

People who give money to panhandlers are perpetuating a culture of phony charity that fuels addiction. I'd be fine with a law that punishes the givers as much or more than the panhandlers. It's a major social problem, after all, and maybe drastic measures are called for.

But if all we're doing is complaining without intending to do anything (it is the Stranger after all, where doing nothing about problems is a way of life), I'd much rather complain about the ones that stink and hear voices in their heads than the ones that don't.
67
@39, 54: We don't like you. You and the company you work(ed) for drains money parasitically away from the causes we support and offer little in return.

Non-profits existed before this job, and they'll exist when they're long gone, with far less annoyance for all involved.

We all understand why you work(ed) there, but you'd have to be stupid to not understand why it's so disliked.
68
Last time I was at TJ's in Ballard there is a sign outside that says something along the lines of "We don't allow canvassers or solicitors outside Trader Joe's. If anyone approaches you, it is not rude to ignore them". My favorite part of that sign was that it was in the funny TJ's font.

Also... is there not a rule against pan handing in Seattle? I can't go to Broadway Market without chuggers and bums harassing me. I mean, there is usually a fat cop sitting right inside the store not doing a thing...
69
Having to choose to not talk to people who approach you on the street is such an awful problem to have, isn't it, you bunch of spoiled whiny little bitches.
70
@68: There is, it seems to be enforced either selectively or serendipitously. Three steps after exiting a drug store I was asked by a man, standing two feet away from a large sign reading 'This area is under 24 hour surveillance', for money. I was about to tell him the location of the nearest food bank (one block east then one block north) when a Seattle Police patrol car stopped in the parking lot. Two officers emerged from the car to talk to the panhandler.
71
Passive-aggressive much? If you don't have the backbone to physically say "no thanks," then you have a problem greater than being annoyed at canvassers.

Just to clear up confusion on how much money goes to the charities in street-canvassing operations: Charities hire canvassing groups on contract; they pay upfront to the group which is paid to the individual canvassers hourly. All (that is 100%) of the money that they collect from donations by the canvassers goes straight to the charity.
72
@69: I wish the blessings of a million telemarketers upon your house.

It's dealable, and most of the people in this thread *do* ignore them or tell 'em to fuck off. I don't know why people say this as if it's a magical idea that's not already in use. They're annoying, telling them to fuck off does not make them less annoying.
73
@71: "All (that is 100%) of the money that they collect from donations by the canvassers goes straight to the charity."

This is not universally true.
74
@44 I use that one too, can't sign your petition, can't donate to your (political) cause, etc, I'm Canadian.

That said, I have a confession to make - until a few months ago, I was a numbers monkey (otherwise known as a quant marketing analyst or, simply put, a statistician) for a large nonprofit. A VERY large nonprofit. Big NFPs do a fair bit of numbers work. Not as much as they should (personal opinion) but a lot.

All channels for acquiring donations cost money. Issue marketing and brand marketing costs money, too. Welcome to harsh reality; it may be distasteful but it's a greens fee. If you want to do something, you need money to do it, and if you want money, you need to get it from somewhere.

I don't know what the profit-to-expense ratio for street canvassers is. Not my side of the house. If it's anything like other channels, it's probably somewhere between 35% (someone's getting fired) and 75% (you get the steak knives). 10% seems like it's not worth the risk to the nfp, unless it's on spec. And even then probably still not worth it.

Last but not least, I do donate to street canvassers. Not frequently, but yeah, I'm an easy mark. I think I did it more when I was living downtown in Big Canadian City; clearly the suburbs have warped my brain.
75
Can we get The Stranger to stop dumping thousands of invasive papers where they are neither wanted nor needed? I might otherwise enjoy reading this paper.
76
@63
I worked as a door-to-door canvasser for a major national environmental organization in the early 90's and it WAS my entry level ticket to a non-profit career.

I too cringe at the tactics of many street canvassers, but have empathy for them.

Also, the purpose of canvassing programs is not so much to raise a ton of money on the spot but to identify donors for direct mail and major gifts campaigns. Non-profits have to constantly identify and cultivate new donors in order to survive and do their work. That's reality.

It's too bad so many idealistic kids get chewed up and spit out by these canvassing operations and burn-out before their ever able to do any actual fieldwork.
77
Some dizzy bitch covered in shitty tattoos tried to hand me a card today, but defeated the purpose by engaging in conversation.
78
TSK! TSK! TSK!

It's kind of demoralizing to see that an article like this was written in one of the most philanthropic cities in the country. However, if you think that something as ignorant and negative as this article will stop us, you are sadly mistaken. If want us off the streets...stop...listen...and stand up against the injustice that is plaguing our planet. The fastest and most effective way to be rid of us is to eliminate these problems. I await the day that I don't have to go out there and talk about these issues!

ISSUES:
*22,000 children die every fucking day from some preventable, treatable disease. (I hope you all are appalled by that figure)

*Seattle is the #1 port in this country for sex trafficking! (Do you have any sisters or kids? Imagine them being put into a brothel at the age of 9 and being abused to the point of death.)

*The junk mail distributed in the U.S. accounts for nearly 30% of the worlds mail! (...FUCK...)

>>>WAKE THE FUCK UP SEATTLE! Even if you don't appreciate the work we do, I guarantee you that your children, grandchildren, great grandchildren will be grateful for US taking action.

P.S. YOU ARE WELCOME!!!
79
TSK! TSK! TSK!

It's kind of demoralizing to see that an article like this was written in one of the most philanthropic cities in the country. However, if you think that something as ignorant and negative as this article will stop us, you are sadly mistaken. If want us off the streets...stop...listen...and stand up against the injustice that is plaguing our planet. The fastest and most effective way to be rid of us is to eliminate these problems. I await the day that I don't have to go out there and talk about these issues!

ISSUES:
*22,000 children die every fucking day from some preventable, treatable disease. (I hope you all are appalled by that figure)

*Seattle is the #1 port in this country for sex trafficking! (Do you have any sisters or kids? Imagine them being put into a brothel at the age of 9 and being abused to the point of death.)

*The junk mail distributed in the U.S. accounts for nearly 30% of the worlds mail! (...FUCK...)

>>>WAKE THE FUCK UP SEATTLE! Even if you don't appreciate the work we do, I guarantee you that your children, grandchildren, great grandchildren will be grateful for US taking action.

P.S. YOU ARE WELCOME!!!
80
If money could have solved these problems they would have already been fixed. Their issue is less with money, and much more about being a slave to it.
81
You guys do realize that the increase in number of street canvassers is almost certainly the result of the recent cratering of the job market? Some of these people would be assholes regardless of where they were, but a lot of it is probably desperation.

I donate money online, so I can research who it's going to and make sure it's actually going directly to them. I don't see any reason to pay a middle man; if the goal is finding employment for these people, there are better ways of doing it (like investing in infrastructure). But if printing up cards to hand out seems easier than saying "not interested, thanks" and moving on, maybe you need to work on your personal assertiveness. It'd be a lot more effective to call the charities directly and explain to them that you're not donating because they use street canvassers.
82
@81 Nothing's for free. Campaigns have to be paid for, websites designed and maintained, donors serviced, direct mail sent, and so on. Staff and managers (including me, cough cough) like to eat. Marketing and administration take their share of any dollar.

That doesn't mean that you shouldn't donate to a NFP. You should do so, absolutely, and the world would be a better place if more people donated more money, more often. And sometimes a high administrative and marketing ratio is necessary to get the dollars in the door and the job done. Judge the NFP based on your personal circumstances, how much and why you agree with their social mission, and their ability to execute that mission.
83
@ 82: Eh? What does any of that have to do with my comment? I don't expect the organizations I support - Planned Parenthood, the EFF, the ACLU, etc - to have zero administrative overhead. But using street canvassers is not an effective way of getting me to donate, since I don't know for certain that the person approaching me actually works for the cause or organization in question, I sometimes am not familiar with the cause or org, and if they're annoying they can actually sabotage that cause or org. This isn't limited to street canvassing, the ACLU lost my money one year because they hired a really obnoxious telemarketer.
84
Alright, I'm not sure how everyone is so misinformed but I will attempt to set things straight. First off, as far a the breakdown of a charity's budget goes, not a single one has a 90% overhead like everyone is ranting about. It's not even considered a non-profit unless the overhead is smaller than 75%, and every single charity you see on the street is far more effective than that. To see more about a charity's fiscal responsibility:

http://www.charitynavigator.org/

While it is true that some fundraisers out there can be overly aggressive, please remember that it is actually illegal for a canvasser to follow you more than 10 steps without consent. It is stalking. If you encounter such a canvasser, don't hand them a card, call the police and their head office.

I think it should also be mentioned that there isn't just one fundraising company in Seattle. There are several, and each focuses on one, perhaps two charities at a time. There is no "charity of the day," and I have no idea who thought that up. Many of us take a lot of pride in who we represent and spend a great deal of time outside of work researching our charity. Also, many canvassers actually donate to the charity they represent because it does make a difference. We are out there because it is the most effective form of fundraising.

I like my job. I talk to awesome people and I help make a difference in the world. A lot of people do care about what we have to say. We don't pressure people, we empower them to make a difference.

Bottom line: saying no isn't hard and neither is being nice about it. Smile everyone; it makes you feel better. If being spoken to makes you that awkward or upset or uncomfortable, then don't go outside.

Oh yeah, that card wastes paper anyway. Don't you have a second for the environment?
85
If the chuggers just stood there, fine; but they don't. They're exceedingly aggressive, as aggressive as some downtown panhandlers: they stand in my way, try to corral me with their hands. They try to engage me with provocative one-line teases. Do the charities these chuggers are acting on-behalf of know how their agents are acting, offending the very people they want money from?

In downtown, at every block, I am put in the position of having to say no at least 1 dozen times. There is no need to make a distinction because they are a charity. It is irrelevant how much the chuggers pocket and how much goes to charity. If 90% went to the charity, I would be no more charitable to the chuggers. They're tactics are offensive. Chuggers, leave me the fuck alone; get out of my fucking way.

Now, I tell them to get their fucking arm away from me and other bon mots. I wear a scowl on my face that implies to the them I should be the last person that they should want to stop. I walk next to the curb to avoid them. Chuggers, again, leave me the fuck alone; get out of my fucking way.

Chuggers, leave me the fuck alone, the onus should not be on me to say a damn word. If I want to engage, I will.

Chuggers, stay the fuck away from me, stay the fuck out of my way. You have been warned,

87
Chuggers, douchy little cards, and piles of hobo shit. I learned so many new things today.
88
Once I was walking down Broadway and was stopped and asked if I wanted "to help kids in Africa."

I replied. "No, I beleive in euthanasia."

The chugger replied, "We help kids in asia too."
89
Dominic Holden, you are an asshole. Obviously you have a sour taste in your mouth due to the fact of being harassed by the douchebags who spoil it for the rest of Seattle's do-gooders. But look at what we canvassers have to go up against: "Sorry!" "Thanks" "I don't have time." I am fucking GENUINE about what I do, and I do not employ the aggressive canvassing techniques like some individuals in Westlake and elsewhere (not naming names) do. I WEAR THIS GODDAMNED VEST for a reason. I genuinely care. It is sad that our city has to be so turned off by street fundraising, because some idiots spoil it for the rest of Seattle, given the fact that we're supposed to be the most philanthropic city in America? Sad fact, considering the claims against the genuine individuals. I do my DAMNEST to ensure that I am doing my part to better humanity. My co-worker nailed it on the fucking head. Wake the FUCK up Seattle. There's a reason why few exist to hold up the majority of humanity. And if not me, then WHO? I am the change I wish to see in this world. Yeah, it might not come about in my lifetime, but I'll be fucked if I don't do my part to engage in actual CONVERSATION with my fellow human beings. Communication, communication. Hear that fucktard? Strong language is all that is necessary at this point in time. Our society is perpetuated by the worldwide web, and a reliance on convenience. "Oh, I'll just go to the website!" How many more excuses must one genuine person endure before the awful realization sets in? That our society is gravitating towards a downward spiral. YES, to all you assholes, genuine or not, going about your merry way on your cell telephones. I wasn't born yesterday. We have excuses, we make excuses. Look at me! I'm not some goddamned robot, or a slave to the masses. I can't be, else I would be a hypocrite. No, the light is few and far between. 5 motherfucking percent. Yes, ME, in red, 5th and PINE, five days a week.
90
Speaking of which, how LEGITIMATE do we have to be to get our fellow Americans to stop? One can only do so much to be "official".
91
I'm not employing a woe-is-me tactic. No, quite the contrary. It's just the ridiculous, innate nature of human beings with all of our petty excuses, enough to make one's hair stand on end. If we want to better our species, it sure as fuck isn't going to come about as a result of apologizing and going about our merry way when we obviously come across someone who is genuine and non-aggressive. Otherwise, what's the fucking point? Should we just throw everything out with the trash every single time we reject a do-gooder? "Sorry, see you later!" No, no, that shit doesn't fly. It doesn't initiate real change. I know for a fact that I sure as hell would rather delight in conversing with someone who actually knew what the fuck they were talking about speaking on behalf of the organization they are working obviously very tirelessly for. And that is the whole thing, Dominic. 'Scuse the fuck out of me for saying it like it is, but your narrowmindedness just makes you a pisspoor representation of progressive Seattle.
92
yes, they get paid! They get paid to to get people to sign up to worthy causes. What does everyone else do on here? Work in a bank, or for the government, or for a newspaper. Give up your day job and volunteer full time for a charity, then you can give out to these people or give them a little card...
93
Although well intentioned, a survey of the above comments misses the point of the article.

The above comments/arguments posit: Whether chuggers get paid or not, whether commission is high/low, whether the cause is worthy/not worthy, it's a hard job, blah blah blah ad nauseum as justification for chuggers horrid aggressive public behavior

The above arguments both for and against chuggers commit informal fallacy of the Kettle type: using multiple inconsistent arguments to defend a position.

The main point of the article, which some of the comments miss, is the aggression of the chuggers. Some of the comments imply that because the chuggers are doing charity work, all is fair game in how they do their job. They can block my way, they can corral me, they can impede my traffic by whatever means they deem necessary because it's for a noble cause, because chuggers have to work too, blah blah blah. And this most incoherent argument from above: chuggers have the right to intrude into my personal space on the (all knowing and incorrect) assumption that I have white collar job. WTF?

Chuggers, your egregiously aggressive approach violates the social contract of basic decent behaviour in a public space: do not harass one's neighbors. Set up a fucking table. Stay out of my way and leave me the fuck alone. Keep your limbs to your fucking self and out of my fucking face.

Again, Chuggers, leave me the fuck alone
94
stay out of YOUR way? outside is our office, chief. YOU'RE in OUR way.
95
@94 What a dumb fuckin response, no wonder you dipshits can't find a real fucking job.
96
Let's not lump all street canvassers into one category. Not all are aggressive and invasive. If you plan to use the douchey card, don't hand it to just any canvasser. Use it wisely.

Thanks to the writers of 55, 63, and 76 for your thoughtful comments. I highly doubt these former canvassers were the type that everyone is so pissed off about here. I wasn't either.
97
@43: So you're offering to house and care for all of the mentally ill on the streets of Seattle? What a big heart you have!
98
@63 and 64: That's nice, but you seem to be missing the reason why most of us carry disdain for chuggers. You may be just barely meeting your quotas and your organizations may be struggling to stay funded, but that does not negate the fact that they are essentially taking money away from the causes they claim to be champions for. No amount of desperation in the person working a job would make it any less disgusting to passersby. Sorry.
99
@96: Yes, it's always someone else, isn't it?
100
UH, I don't need no stinkin card. I stomp Broadway daily and I just ignore them. Easy squeezy, lemon peasey.
101
@69:

Your comment about this being a problem for "spoiled whiney bitches", while seemingly clever is self-riteous and misguided. One could argue that by using aggressive tactics to garner support, street canvassers are hindering their potential by creating a negative connotation with their cause. That is a problem worth complaining about. Also, they are being tasteless and ill-mannered. Traits that are the root of some of the gravest problems facing humanity today.
102
Boo fuckin hoo. Go buy a latte.
103
I canvassed door-to-door for many years and ended up being a canvass director for 5 years after. I enjoyed the work and made my non-profit bones that way. True, a lot of money went into the administration of the canvass, very little into the pockets of canvassers. This was all better than a decade ago.

But here's the deal--we identified a huge number of people who became actively engaged as volunteers and advocates for environmental, consumer and tenant-landlord issues. We also talked with people who eagerly gave more and larger contributions over time, effectively changing the administration-to-issue work ratio dramatically. If I observed people being rude or intimidating, they were fired on the spot. If I got a complaint from someone we canvassed (our contact information was on every piece of paper we handed out), I gave the canvasser an opportunity to tell his or her story, and then decided how to handle it. My rule was that if a canvasser got more than three complaints in a month, they were fired. I never had to enforce that rule. Complaints were very rare. I got perhaps two in the course of an average year.

I can't stand street canvassers. I just do not ever engage with them, no matter the issue. But if someone comes to my door, they get a drink of water, the bathroom if they need it, a quick and professional critique of their rap, and some cash if I agree with their issue. I have money to contribute now, and I love the look on a canvasser's face when you contribute. Door-to-door canvassers are a different breed--bold, observant, friendly, more thoughtful and usually more knowledgeable about their chosen issue.

Maybe I'm just old school.
104
@103: "But here's the deal--we identified a huge number of people who became actively engaged as volunteers and advocates for environmental, consumer and tenant-landlord issues."

Yeah, there's absolutely no interest in or structure for motivating and mobilizing people from street canvassing.

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