Correction to This Article
An Oct. 28 article incorrectly said that the American Red Cross received a $70 million appropriation from Congress last year to make up for a budget shortfall after four hurricanes hit Florida. The appropriation was for as much as $70 million, and of that, the Red Cross said it has received $27 million.
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Red Cross Borrowing Funds for Storm Aid

University of Maryland student-athletes collect donations for the American Red Cross's Hurricane Katrina fund at a football game in College Park last month. The nonprofit predicts a disaster relief shortfall of about $400 million.
University of Maryland student-athletes collect donations for the American Red Cross's Hurricane Katrina fund at a football game in College Park last month. The nonprofit predicts a disaster relief shortfall of about $400 million. (By Doug Pensinger -- Getty Images)
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Chartered by Congress in 1905, the Red Cross today is designated by the federal government as the nation's front-line responder in national emergencies in providing "mass care" -- shelter, food and first aid for disaster victims. It also functions as a support agency to the government in providing blood, first aid and counseling services.

Those services are not affected by the current shortfall in the disaster fund. The Red Cross has taken out a $1 billion line of credit from seven banks and continues to raise money from the public.

Although this hurricane season marks the first time the Red Cross has borrowed money for disaster relief, the organization has turned to Congress several times to make up shortfalls. Most recently, it received a $70 million appropriation last year after four hurricanes raked Florida.

Some question the Red Cross's current claim of financial hardship, suggesting that the organization could divert money from its other operations.

Daniel Borochoff, president of the American Institute of Philanthropy, which monitors how charities spend their money, said that based on the organization's most recent IRS reporting form, it has $700 million on hand to use.

"For them to claim that they have nothing is not being very responsible," he said. "They have funds available for a disaster, even if it is not in the Disaster Fund."

But yesterday, the Red Cross disputed that assessment. "We have [the funds] as a resource, but it needs to be spent on what it's designated to be spent on," Martin, the spokeswoman, said.

Beyond the internal constraints, the Red Cross has vowed to respect donors' wishes when they give to a particular disaster. Complaints that it had failed to do so were raised after the bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building in 1995, the Red River Valley flooding in 1997 and the California wildfires in 2001. After the Sept. 11 attacks, the charity established a policy against redirecting earmarked contributions.

Public policy and disaster relief experts said the Red Cross should submit to a systemic, independent audit of relief operations. They suggested that such an examination probably would reveal troubled relations between the national leadership and local chapters, faulty coordination of relief and fundraising efforts, and poor cooperation with other charities.

Many of these problems have arisen in the eight weeks since Katrina struck.

Last week, the Red Cross was embarrassed when it discovered it had grossly overestimated the number and costs of a hotel program for Katrina evacuees: There were 200,000 people in hotels, not 600,000, officials acknowledged.

Earlier, evacuees in rural communities waited days for the Red Cross to show up. Those who could find phones dialed for hours to reach a toll-free number set up to link them with Red Cross financial help. In Shreveport, La., the shelter in the Hirsch Coliseum was so short of basic supplies that Red Cross staff went begging to a local church for diapers and underwear.

At the same time, some African American organizations accuse the Red Cross of ignoring rural black communities, particularly in coastal Mississippi.

"It was the poorest logistical planning for communities of color that could possibly have happened," said Joe Leonard Jr., executive director of the Washington-based Black Leadership Forum and organizer of relief efforts in that region after Katrina. Leonard said churches and civil rights groups, which survivors dubbed "the Black Cross," stepped in to provide aid in the absence of the Red Cross.

"When you've got communities that don't have any visit by the Red Cross at all, no shelter, no water or food and in terrible straits . . . Lord, I'm surprised more people didn't die," said George Penick, president of the Foundation for the Mid South, which helped channel aid to the gulf region and coordinate relief efforts.

Yesterday, the Red Cross acknowledged that its response to minority evacuees during Katrina and Rita was lacking, with some African American communities having less access to aid than white communities. Leaders met last week with 60 faith-based groups, ethnic groups and community organizations to talk about developing a "broader sense of inclusion" in its disaster-relief efforts, said Rick Pogue, the charity's chief diversity officer.

Ultimately, the Red Cross needs to open itself to greater outside scrutiny and address its shortcomings, said Peter Dobkin Hall, a lecturer on nonprofit organizations at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government.

"What happens if you don't do that is you live off your myth and you conceal problems," he said. "They're an organization obsessed by its own myth, that thinks it can do it all itself."

Staff writer Gilbert M. Gaul contributed to this report.


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