PGA Tour Estimates Charity Giving Down 1014 Percent Due To Recession 2009: Means Toad

PGA Tour estimates charity giving down 1014 percent due to recession

This means no toad racing, no Toadal Kids Zone, no concerts and no guarantee that any of the vendors will be open.
The Toad Suck Daze Committee will decide by 6 p.m. whether the festival will reopen tomorrow. “If I had to guess right now, I’d say we wouldn’t be off more than 10 to 14 percent with our charitables, which I think would be a victory,” commissioner Tim Finchem said Wednesday. “If that were the case, I would feel real good about it. It’s still to early to tell.” PGA Tour events are structured as nonprofit organizations that donate proceeds to local charities. Finchem said the tour last year raised $124 million for charity, and his estimate means the tour is on pace to give $12 million to $17 million less in 2009. Still, Finchem was optimistic that the tour will weather the meltdown in good financial shape. “We continue to be optimistic,” Finchem said. “We think this is cyclical, and we’re taking steps that allow us to be stronger coming out than when we went in.” Finchem had a dual purpose for his visit to the nation’s capital. He and Presidents Cup captains Fred Couples and Greg Norman spent the morning on Capitol Hill doing a bit of lobbying on behalf of their sport, then headed to the National Press Club to promote the U.S.-vs.-International team event that will be held at San Francisco’s Harding Park course in October.
“The basic message is reminding members (of Congress) that golf is an industry of $75 billion, $76 billion,” Finchem said.

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