The Salt Lake Tribune They also will forego a foreign bicycle tour, and will put off remodeling their Ogden home this year.
“We’re entering the age of restraint,” Sally Neill says. The reason for the retired couple’s frugality Not only are their investments hurting, nonprofits they care about need them now more than ever. People such as the Neills, who are adjusting their lifestyles so they can continue — or increase — support for community nonprofits, are now seen as the nonprofit world’s salvation. Just as during the Great Depression, when Americans “We’re getting hit on all sides and our only hope is the individual donor,” says Chris Bray, executive director of Children’s Service Society, which helps adoptive and grandparent-led families.
A number of Utah nonprofits find reason for hope.