World
Emergency Relief receives
dozens of urgent aid requests every year from deserving
people in the U.S. and overseas. Each project WER embraces
must be fully accountable for its' own program integrity.
Our staff and
field workers follow over 30 procedures to
deliver a single shipment of emergency supplies from the U.S.
to a foreign port - not including the additional effort (and costs)
to get our goods from port to project, often over jungle roads
or through an active war zone. Our domestic programs, both disaster
relief and for Native Americans, are held to similar levels of
accountability.
Back in 1985,
we developed our “Seven Basic A’s” for
selecting programs WER will consider for sponsoring.
Each of our projects must meet:
1-Asking: We
must be asked to help.Without that “ask”,
we can’t possibly know what aid to deliver, where,
when or to whom. WER never “ships
for the sake of shipping”.
2-Accessability: Can
our supplies be safely delivered and stored under adverse
circumstances? Will local laws or practices (i.e., Customs
delays or organized crime) hinder our work?
3-Acceptability: Will
our efforts be accepted locally? American aid and Christian
ministry are not welcomed resources in some cultures.
4-Availability: Can WER get
appropriate resources to do our job? Can we meet the
requests of our project colleagues for specific needs?
We will never knowingly “ship junk”.
5-Affordability: Resources
must be used wisely and committed carefully. In any WER outreach,
we strive to avoid commitments we can't meet; Solid hope
isn't built on shaky promises.
6-Appropriateness: Is
the proposed outreach a proper effort for a Christian
ministry and a charity representing the United States
of America? Would our donors be pleased or offended by
a particular effort?
7-Accountability: Will
our resources reach the people we are determined to help
and be properly used? Will we get field reports? Are
site visits possible, even in war zones? Can we meet
regulatory and audit standards, both in the U.S. and
overseas?
Furthermore,
our partner charities must fully subscribe, in writing,
to the AERDO standards for Gifts-in-Kind (see www.aerdo.org)
and provide a current, detailed and complete budget, Board
approved, and signed by both the Chief Executive and Board
treasurer. Organizations with $100,000 USD or more in annual
resources must
also submit an independent, certified audit.
Not every group
works this way, and we respect other methods. However, this approach
works for us and assures our donors of their maximum positive
impact on troubled lives. |