Indiana Rose Lee
Baby Factory Extraordinaire! ;)
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2009
- Messages
- 2,329
I misuderstood, then, and I apologize. I hadn't realized you had a child in your group. My mistake.
So, what is this year's theme now?
I misuderstood, then, and I apologize. I hadn't realized you had a child in your group. My mistake.
I don't understand why the one million person limit. This seems to be a GREAT way to encourage volunteerism and for Disney is a great "loss-leader". Everyone knows you spend money IN the parks, not getting in. I can't fathom why they would pull the plug on it. It is obviously popular and with the state of the world...Haiti, Chile...we need volunteers more than ever.
I can see them setting a limit....but actually it could be great publicity for disney if they advertised how they got one million already and are extending it for one million more, or something like that!
I think that tax law may have limited what they were willing to give away. The cost of the tickets can probably be written off as a charitable contribution. Maybe they limited it to one million because that is the closest round number to the maximum value they can write off. I write off all of the monetary donations I give.
Disney is a publicly traded company and has fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders. They are philanthropic but I don't begrudge them only giving up to the amount they can deduct as a way to offset the cost to their shareholders.
Of course I am not a tax lawyer and don't know for sure, I am just making an educated guess.
Valid points!
I do wonder how many tickets they gave away last year though for the Birthday Celebration.
I don't think that the Disney people projected Hands On Network filling so many volunteer positions so quickly. Many Summer events were approved for the program but were not able to accept volunteers until 60 days out. Reading about the food drive in NC, how were they going to be able to give 4 vouchers for a donated bag of food? Yes,the Disney ticket was a nice incentive to encourage folks who do not volunteer, I just don't understand the inequity in time and efforts invested. Exactly what level of volunteerism is it to bake 2 dozen cookies and donate them? We spend 5 to 6 months planning a 1 week day camp for 200 scouts. What I see is the same people who volunteer as leaders also volunteer to plan and then run activities at the camp. We were hoping to use the GAD program as an incentive to motivate people who would otherwise not volunteer. I think it is a wasted effort to tell charities NOT to sign up volunteers. Perhaps even if all of the million vouchers were accounted for, there could have been a certificate of appreciation from the big mouse himself? If GAD was generating so much interest, it just appears to waste the opportunity to get volunteer activites front and center.
Thank you so much for that. I'm always amazed at the planning that goes into those camps. I'm a leader, and my DH helps out at camp. We are always looking for ways to get other parents to help. We had thought of using this promotion also to get people interested. (I didn't do the promotion myself since we aren't going this year, and I never thought about donating it!) It is so annoying to hear people say they don't have time to volunteer. I don't have time either, but I still do it. Our committee chair person says we are suffering from STP. Same ten people doing everything.![]()
The same reason that you personally put a limit on the number of days you visit WDW.I don't understand why the one million person limit.
It won't make a difference --- if they did as you suggest, then people would complain about that.Disney needs to come up with a theme that does not include give aways. People just go crazy when they think they are missing out on something.
What you are implying is a grievous distortion of what Disney promised.
The idea was very explicitly to encourage one million people to volunteer, and they did do a great job.
Valid points!
I do wonder how many tickets they gave away last year though for the Birthday Celebration.
I think practically all allegations of "being greedy" that people make these days are utterly ridiculous. Claiming someone or some company is greedy is trendy and hip, and typically utterly self-serving and vacuous.
I made no such accusations about anyone, earlier in this thread. That was other folks I suppose.
With regard to the issue of people not knowing where they stand with the cut-off, that's immaterial. If you read about the offer and you are interested in it, do what you have to register yourself for it. If you don't complete your obligations in this regard in time, then that's on you. I can understand people's disappointment, just as you, but I don't think people's disappointment at missing out translates into anything other than something disappointing. Trying to project it as something Disney did wrong is ludicrous. Why can't people just accept that sometimes things don't work out, without having to try to find someone else to blame about it?
I'm glad to see it over with.