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The following is a portion of the article "The Chronicle of Philanthropy" written August 7, 1997. Story by Marina Dundjerski.

The Washington Post -- Thursday, July 30, 1998 -- First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton embraces breast cancer survivor Betsy Mullen of Los Angeles at a White House ceremony marking the release of a postage stamp that will raise money for beast cancer research. (photo by Robert A. Reeder)

Congress Approves Stamp to Raise Research Money
 
Washington -- Congressional approval of a special postage stamp to raise money for breast-cancer research could pave the way for many charities to take advantage of a new way to use the mail to reach people who support their causes.

Congress last month passed a bill to authorize the sale of a new first-class stamp that would generate funds for breast-cancer research. The measure, which President Clinton is expected to sign, marks the first time that the U.S. Postal Service has been told by legislators to help raise money for a specific cause. Congressional supporters said they believed that the stamp would raise at least $60-million a year.

"Stamp by stamp and penny by penny, we're hoping we can find a cure for breast cancer," says Elizabeth Mullen, founder of the Women's Information Network Against Breast Cancer in Los Angeles, which pushed for the bill. "We're also hoping that we are establishing a mechanism that ultimately could be used for fund raising for other cancers and other diseases."

Supplementing Federal Aid

The special stamp is expected to cost anywhere from 33 cents to 40 cents, depending on how much the Postal Service decides would b needed to cover printing, sale, and distribution costs.

People could buy the breast-cancer stamps at their local post offices for use on their first-class mail. Seventy per cent of the money remaining after the Post Office covers its costs would go to the National Institutes of Health and 30 per cent to the Department of Defense, which would channel the money to a major breast-cancer research effort being conducted by the Army.

The legislation says the federal government must use the new funds to supplement current research spending - and cannot reduce appropriations to those agencies just because the fund-raising stamp exists.

The Postal Service would have one year to design and market the stamp. The General Accounting Office would then be asked to judge the stamp's effectiveness in raising money for research and assess how well it works for the Postal Service to be involved in such a fund-raising effort.

If the stamp proves to be popular, many charities are expected to lobby for stamps for their own causes. But if it does not sell well, then Congress probably will end the experiment and reject all similar proposals.

Last Updated: 02/12/2003


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