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Common Impact Launches Disaster Response Program

By Common Impact | September 11, 2019

New Program Will Help Communities Prepare for and Recover from Crisis

The private sector can take a larger, more strategic role in disaster preparedness for communities through skilled volunteerism, shares new research and disaster response programming launched by Common Impact, a nationally recognized leader in skills-based volunteerism.

The organization today released a report –  Insights & Impact 2019: Disaster Response – From Relief to Resiliency – detailing how the corporate sector can proactively respond to increasing instances of natural and man-made disasters in the U.S. by providing pro bono support.

Based on extensive interviews and research from leaders in disaster response throughout the U.S., the report highlights the critical role skills-based volunteerism can play in helping communities faced with increasingly common natural and man-made catastrophe, and presents a number of practical tools and guidance for corporate citizens to best support nonprofit partners and their communities in resiliency and recovery efforts.

A report by the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation finds that 70% of giving occurs within the first two months of a disaster’s occurrence. The Center for Disaster Philanthropy reports that only 1% of corporate sector giving goes toward preparedness and .8% towards resilience, risk reduction and mitigation combined.

“The current business environment and our research confirm that the business community must broaden its response to disasters from one of reactive donations to support immediate relief efforts to include a more proactive and sustained approach that allows community nonprofits to build resiliency through pro bono support in business continuity planning, risk mitigation and contingency planning,” said Danielle Holly, CEO of Common Impact. “Given our 20 years of work helping Fortune 500 companies engage their most strategic asset – their people – in building stronger communities, we understand the power of skills-based volunteerism as a critical investment in community resiliency.”

The report shares a new approach to disaster response, one rooted in proactive engagement, and provides corporate philanthropy partners with a suite of tools to help engage in disaster resiliency work in their communities.

Included in the report is a case study on how International Medical Corps (IMC), an organization that provides vital healthcare services to communities affected by war, natural disaster and disease, uses pro bono support to increase the reach and quality of its relief services. 

“Private sector companies are also affected [by disaster]. The NGO community has a lot to learn from all of the expertise, learning, and work that private sector companies have already done around the whole continuum of disaster response,” says Erica Tavares, Senior Director of Institutional Advancement at IMC.     

While natural disasters have traditionally been the focus of the private sector’s engagement in community crisis, companies are increasingly taking a stand on man-made crises, such as mass shootings and the detention of immigrants at the U.S. border.  The report shares a conversation with Amy Smith, Chief Giving Officer at TOMS, a mission-based company that has recently joined a campaign against gun violence. Smith shares the background on TOMS engagement in gun violence, sparked by company founder Blake Mycoskie’s personal connection to a mass shooting in Thousand Oaks, CA, and a framework that TOMS uses to assess its engagement in man-made crises.   

“At TOMS, we knew the world around us was changing, and we had already been asking ourselves ‘Where else are we going to be putting our energy and focusing our impact?’”, Amy Smith, Chief Giving Officer at TOMS explains. “When the Thousand Oaks shooting happened, it just felt like the right thing to do on every level. Blake was driving into work and his wife called him and said, ‘There’s been a shooting. It’s in our backyard. I’m not taking the kids to school today. Somebody has to do something.’  And he thought, ‘Well, if not us, who? If not now, when?’”

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