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Opinion: Connecticut Post
Article Last Updated: 12/01/2005 07:43 AM
Our miserly region must donate more
As New Englanders, Connecticut residents have plenty to brag about.
Our region is steeped in history and tradition. It boasts a terrific and
picturesque coastline and is one of the wealthiest regions in the
country.
But there's at least one thing all of us in New England should be
embarrassed of: despite being in the upper percentile for average gross
income in the country, the six states in New England are some of the
most miserly in the nation when it comes to donating to charities.
According to a recent study by the Catalogue of Philanthropy, New
England is the most tight-fisted region in the country. New Hampshire
was ranked as the least generous state in the nation — for the fourth
year in a row — followed directly by Massachusetts. Rhode Island and
Connecticut both joined their two fellow New England states as the six
least generous states.
Mississippi, one of the poorest states in America, was ranked first.
It's important to note that the yearly Generosity Index is ranked by the
Catalogue of Philanthropy and is adjusted for average gross incomes and
uses the value of itemized charitable donations reported to Internal
Revenue Service tax returns. That means that the study takes into
account both having and giving.
It's not the first time Connecticut and its fellow New England states
have placed poorly in the yearly study, either. New England has been
ranked as the most penny-pinching region for the past several years.
Last year, Connecticut was 44th on the Generosity Index, and was 37th
the year before that.
It's no coincidence the study on charitable donations is released like
clockwork in the weeks before Thanksgiving and the holiday season. Of
course charitable donations should be a year-round habit, but giving to
those who are less fortunate seems to take an even greater importance
during the holidays.
Especially during a year where the world felt the effects of a
devastating tsunami in the Indian Ocean and a crippling hurricane in New
Orleans, it is pitiful that a wealthy state like Connecticut couldn't
share its wealth with those less fortunate.
Now is the perfect time of year for all of us to give whatever amount we
can to those who are less fortunate than we are. Maybe then Connecticut
can avoid the embarrassment of being dubbed one of the cheapest states
in the nation yet again come this time next year.