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| Luigi Troiani (right) and Michael Driscoll hug after participating in the
2003 Tour de Friends bicycle ride, which raised money for AIDS charities. Food & Friends
officials announced this week it would not stage the event in 2004. (Photo
by Luis Gomez)
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HOME > NEWS > LOCAL
By: LOU CHIBBARO JR. COMMENTS
The D.C. AIDS service group Food & Friends announced this week it has
discontinued its Tour de Friends AIDS bike ride following the release of financial
figures showing that nearly 90 percent of the money it raised went to cover
overhead expenses.
Figures released by Food & Friends show that the June 19-22 cycling event
raised $2.6 million from riders and supporters but incurred more than $2.3
million in overhead expenses, yielding only $265, 324 in net proceeds.
Food & Friends began the Tour de Friends ride this year as a replacement
for the annual D.C. AIDS Ride, which was produced the previous seven years
by the for-profit fund-raising firm Pallotta Teamworks.
Participation in the Pallotta ride declined dramatically in 2002, and Food & Friends
Executive Director Craig Shniderman expressed hope that the non-profit Food & Friends
would restore support for the AIDS ride by severing its ties to Pallotta and
organizing the ride as an in-house event.
The Whitman-Walker Clinic, which had been co-beneficiary with Food & Friends
in the Pallotta-produced rides, chose not to participate in the Tour de Friends
event.
“The evidence shows that the number of people interested in doing this
type of ride is off on a permanent basis,” Shniderman said. “Unfortunately,
there is no longer justification for doing this again.”
In an Oct. 20 e-mail letter to the 693 riders and 308 volunteer support staff
that participated in the Tour de Friends ride, Shniderman said, “Regretfully,
we have decided that there will not be a Tour de Friends in 2004. We want the
efforts of our supporters to maximally benefit the battle against AIDS and
the ‘MegaRide’ no longer looks like the way to go.”
The Tour de Friends ride traveled 330-miles between June 19 and June 22 from
Raleigh, N.C., to D.C. Two other AIDS groups, the Alliance of AIDS Service
of North Carolina and the Fan Free Clinic of Richmond, Va., participated as
co-beneficiaries with Food & Friends. Under a prearranged agreement, Food & Friends
put up two-thirds of the start-up costs and was to receive two-thirds of the
$265,288 in net proceeds. The other two groups were to split the remaining
one-third of the proceeds.
Food & Friends was founded 14 years ago as a non-profit group to deliver
pre-cooked meals to homebound people with HIV and AIDS. In recent years it
has expanded its meal delivery services to people with other serious diseases.
According to its Web site, the group now delivers “meals and groceries
to more than 1,100 people living with HIV/AIDS and other life-challenging illnesses
such as breast, lung and colon cancer through Washington, D.C. and 14 counties
in Maryland and Virginia.”
Shniderman said Food & Friends is organizing a contingent of 125 riders
who will raise $1,900 each to participate next year in the 16-year-old Cycle
Across Maryland ride, a recreational bike ride produced by a cycling group
that promotes cycling and walking as an alternative to driving. He said One
Less Car: the Maryland Campaign for Bicycling and Walking, the group that organizes
the Maryland bike ride, has agreed to allow the Food & Friends contingent
to “piggy-back” on its ride. Shniderman said Food & Friends’ participation
is part of a scaled back effort to continue the spirit of the D.C. AIDS rides
and a way to raise some money for its services.
The ride consists of three, one-day bike trips beginning and returning each
day to Emmitsburg, a town near the Maryland-Pennsylvania border, located about
40 miles northeast of Hagerstown.
Shniderman said the 693 riders participating in this year’s Tour de
Friends ride marked a continuation of the downward trend in rider participation
in AIDS rides throughout the nation and was the main cause of the poor financial
return. The 2002 ride, the last year the D.C. ride was produced by Pallotta
Teamworks, attracted 1,117 riders, a thousand fewer than the 2,118 riders who
participated in the 2001 D.C. AIDS Ride.
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| Craig Shniderman, executive director of Food & Friends, announced
this week that his group determined it is not financially feasible to continue
the Tour de Friends AIDS ride, which began this year. |
Similar to last year, riders had to raise at least $2,500 to participate.
According to Shniderman, individual riders this year raised about the same
amount of contributions as individual riders did last year, with some raising
considerably more than $2,500.
He said this year’s ride reduced overhead expenses by $675,000 compared
to last year’s ...
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