ADRA has many
resources available for use in schools, churches, or in your home.
What Is The Best Way To Help ADRA's Response To A Disaster?
Monetary donations are the best, as they allow ADRA to immediately purchase specific items that survivors need. Most essential relief goods, such as medicines, temporary shelter, tools, clothing, blankets, and latrines, can be purchased locally or in neighboring countries at a lower price. Purchasing them locally not only helps provide these items quickly but also helps stimulate the economy in the disaster area. Often, unsolicited goods (such as used clothes, canned goods, etc.) clog transportation routes, hindering needed supplies from gaining clearance at shipping ports.
Does ADRA Accept Clothing?
ADRA no longer accepts used clothing due to the decline of requests from countries. In addition, the cost of shipping has become so expensive that it is no longer affordable. ADRA is also concerned with the affect that importing used clothing has on the local economies.
Why Doesn't ADRA Collect Offerings In Churches?
ADRA International's donors have said they wish to receive mailings from ADRA that keep them informed about its ministry and updates on how donations are being used. Adventist churches have an established list of monthly offerings that are collected. Once each year, on the second Sabbath (Saturday) of May, the Disaster and Famine Relief Offering (DFRO) is collected in Seventh-day Adventist churches. ADRA receives a portion of this offering.
I Donate To ADRA Through My Church. Why Doesn't ADRA Send Me A Receipt?
Your church keeps confidential all the donations given to ADRA International through them. In other words, ADRA is not informed of any individual donor's name or the project you select when your church sends a lump sum offering to ADRA. Because your church does not inform us of the individual donor names, ADRA cannot issue a receipt to you, nor is your name on our donor list. If you wish to receive an ADRA International receipt or to specify an area for your donation, you must make your donation directly to ADRA International by calling 1.800.424.2372, donating
online, or mailing your donation to: ADRA International, 12501 Old Columbia Pike, Silver Spring, MD 20904, USA.
Does ADRA Accept Government Funding?
While ADRA International partners with governments on projects, ADRA is free to determine what projects and initiatives it will undertake. That decision is based on what will best meet the needs of the people it is serving. The acceptance of funds places ADRA in a mutually beneficial partnership. ADRA designs a proposal in cooperation with a community, which is then reviewed and accepted by the government funder. The program's objectives and activities are developed by ADRA, and once the government funder has approved them, they become the results that ADRA agrees to achieve. Government-funded projects are independently audited and regular financial reports are submitted. They are also independently evaluated. This assures you that your tax dollars are being used to meet the needs of the people as intended.
Can I Sponsor A Child Through ADRA?
ADRA aims to benefit whole communities rather than focus on individuals, as this builds up intra-community relationships. As such, ADRA has chosen not to do child sponsorships. Children are major beneficiaries of ADRA International programs that seek to integrate health, clean water, sanitation, food production, small businesses, and basic education-including literacy.
Are ADRA International Projects Audited?
The ADRA office in each donor country (funding country office) is responsible for coordinating audits for the project(s) they are funding. Responsibilities of the Internal Audit Office at ADRA Headquarters include monitoring and arranging external audits for projects funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). The General Conference Auditing Service audits ADRA country/administration accounting. All audit reports are submitted to ADRA Headquarters Internal Audit Office. In turn, these reports are presented to and reviewed by the ADRA Audit Review Committee, which reports directly to ADRA's International's Board of Directors. ADRA International Headquarters is audited yearly by PricewaterhouseCoopers.
How Does ADRA International Help In The United States?
While ADRA International operates development and emergency management programs overseas, when a disaster strikes in the Unites States ADRA works together with local organizations and trusted partners to provide assistance to those who have been affected. ADRA partners with organizations like Adventist Community Services (ACS) by allocating funding for domestic emergency response programs. By collaborating with local organizations that have established relationships with federal, state, and local agencies, ADRA and partners like ACS are better able to meet the urgent needs of those who have been affected by disasters.
How Is ADRA International Associated With The Seventh-Day Adventist Church?
ADRA is an independent agency established by the Seventh-day Adventist Church. The church's involvement in organized humanitarian assistance goes back nearly 80 years. In 1956 the church created the Seventh-day Adventist Welfare Service, Incorporated (SAWS). The name was modified in 1973 to be Seventh-day Adventist World Service, and in 1984 SAWS was reorganized under the current name, Adventist Development and Relief Agency International (ADRA).
Do ADRA International Programs Benefit Adventist Church Members?
When a disaster strikes, humanitarian agencies are often assigned specific areas to implement projects, and if Adventist members who are affected by the disaster are living in the area assigned to ADRA, they will receive aid. ADRA has hundreds of projects worldwide that benefit Adventist members who are living in the areas where it works. However, ADRA helps those who need it most, regardless of their religious affiliation.
Can I Give A Donation Specifically To Help Only Adventists Members?
We don't have any projects in which we help ONLY one group or another. If we discriminated, you'd have a village where some children would get food, medical care, and clean water, and other children would be hungry, sick, and thirsty. Instead, we follow Christ's example of helping those who need it most, no matter their background. That way, we demonstrate His unconditional love. ADRA's mission is to provide assistance without regard to religious, political, or ethnic background. Because we follow this mandate faithfully, we are sometimes the only humanitarian agency able to reach people in need.
How Does Aid Reach ADRA’s Beneficiaries?
ADRA has a worldwide infrastructure in 120 countries that enables the agency to pre-position and store aid, such as food, medicines, equipment, emergency supplies, etc. Depending on the type of program and needs, ADRA uses a wide variety of transportation methods to get needed aid to its beneficiaries -- a boat on the Amazon, a truck, a train, a solar-powered refrigerator in a local clinic, mobile units, and even volunteers on foot.