What Your Donation Actually Funds: A Transparent Look at $10 to $500
· Sanctuary Community Initiative · 2 min read
When you give to a nonprofit, you're placing trust that your money becomes real help. We think you deserve to see exactly what that looks like, no vague "your gift makes a difference" language. Here's the concrete translation of dollars into stability for people rebuilding after treatment and incarceration in the Phoenix area.
The philosophy: fund the gap
Sanctuary Community Initiative exists to fund what insurance and grants don't. Treatment is covered. Big programs get grants. But the bus pass, the deposit, the work boots, the groceries between completing treatment and a first paycheck, nobody pays for those, and any one of them missing at the wrong moment can unravel months of progress. So your gift goes straight into that gap.
Roughly what each level funds
These are illustrative approximations of real needs, not fixed per-item prices, but they're grounded in what we actually spend on:
- $10: A week of transit passes to reach a job interview, a home clinic appointment, or daily recovery meetings. In sprawling Phoenix, transportation is a silent gatekeeper; this unlocks it.
- $25: Groceries to bridge part of the gap between completing treatment and a first paycheck. Nobody works a recovery program hungry.
- $50: Work boots and basic interview clothing to unlock an entry-level or trade job. Employment is one of the strongest predictors of staying out.
- $100: A meaningful contribution toward a sober living deposit or the bridge nights between treatment completion and a housing placement.
- $250: A substantial portion of a first month's housing bridge, the platform every other kind of recovery stands on.
- $500: A full housing bridge or a bundled support package spanning several categories at once, carrying someone through the highest-risk early window.
Why the small amounts matter most
Here's what surprises people: the $10 and $25 gifts often change a week most visibly. National data shows rearrest risk is heavily front-loaded in the first months after release, and homelessness among formerly incarcerated people runs roughly ten times the general public's rate. A bus pass or a bag of groceries at the right moment is disproportionately powerful precisely because it arrives when someone is most fragile.
See it for yourself
Our Donate and Numbers pages include an interactive impact slider, move it across these amounts and watch the described impact change in real time. It's the same transparency in interactive form.
Try the slider and give what fits on our Donate page.