EcoReport is your award-winning guide to green travel, green cars, and saving the green in your wallet on both.

EcoReport is written and edited by Evelyn Kanter, a professional journalist with a lifetime of experience a magazine and newspaper writer and photographer, radio and television news producer and reporter, and guidebook author and editor -- all focusing on travel, automotive, lifestyle, the environment, and your rights as a consumer.

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Airlines, Hotels Help Japan Earthquake & Tsunami Victims

Instead of beating up airlines for making us crazy by finding new ways to charge us more money for things like pillows, checked baggage and seats with leg room, it’s time to recognize how airlines step forward when there is a crisis and turn into good guys.

Delta is pledging $1 million in cash [...]

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Help Japan Earthquake, Tsunami Victims with your Phone

Text a charity donation to help Japan earthquake, tsunami victims. Photo courtesy CNBC

The photos and video from Japan of the devastating earthquake and tsunamis, and their aftermath, are both riveting and heart-stopping.  The massive humanitarian aid campaign already is underway, and you can help.  Use your phone to text in a$10 donation [...]

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How to Get Your Friends to Pay for Your Hawaii Vacation

NYC Marathon

Many of the world’s top marathons and cycling events, including the New York Marathon, include entrants who have raised money for a particular charity, usually one that has affected a close family member or friend, from breast cancer to multiple sclerosis.  But the charity they are running or cycling for does not pay their airfare, hotels or other expenses to participate.  They pay their own way, and the money raised goes to the charity.  Here’s one charity that lets you use part of the money you raise to pay for your expenses to get to the marathon, in effect, giving you a free trip, paid for by the friends, neighbors and co-workers you hit up for donations, and the charity gets whatever is left over –

The Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America is advertising now for participants in its upcoming 2011 marathons and half-marathons in Kona, on Big Island Hawaii, and in Vigrinia’s wine country.  A similar fund-raising marathon event was held in Las Vegas in December.  The program includes 16 weeks of training sessions with professional coaches in your hometown, to prepare you for the main event, plus clinics and parties to educate you on the ins and outs of fund-raising.

The charity is legitimate, and so are the ravages of Chrohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis.  More than one million people in the United States are sufferers, and most sufferers develop the illnesses between the ages of 18 and 35, according to the charity’s own website.  But — and this is a big but — the Chrohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America is not well regarded by charity monitoring services.  It has a three-star rating from Charity Navigator, my go-to charity monitoring organization.  By comparison, three other charities named by Charity Navigator as  performing similar types of work in researching cures for Crohn’s disease and colitis and providing support for  its sufferers, are rated higher, with four stars each.  The four-star list includes the National Organization for Rare Disorders, so let’s just compare these two charities.

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Avoid Gulf Coast Oil Spill Charity Frauds

Avoid BP Oil Spill Charity FraudsThe good guys are volunteering and working overtime to undo the damage of the BP oil spill, the worst environmental disaster US history.   Beware of  frauds.  The bad guys are out there scamming instead of skimming.

Job Scams — One fraud is asking you to pay up front for a job helping clean up the mess.  Jobs available directly with BP are posted on BP’s website. For jobs through the state, such as FloridaAlabamaLouisiana and Mississippi, you can visit the states’ own job websites. If you have been recruited by a company that claims to have a contract with BP, The Better Business Bureau recommends that you research the business fully and try to confirm with BP that they are a legitimate employer for the oil spill clean up. Simply —  be wary of companies that require you  to pay an upfront fee.

Claim Scam: The FTC warns against phony adjusters who ask for fees to expedite services.  The toll-free BP claims line is 1-800-440-0858. The line is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, or you can file a claim online through BP’s website. Additionally, there are many claims offices along the Gulf Coast. More information is available through the Deepwater Horizon Response website and on BP’s website.

Charity frauds — It always happens.  After any disaster, the creeps come out of the woodwork to take advantage by setting up phony charities, including with names that sound like — oh, so close — to legitimate, reputable charities.  Before you give, check with charity watchdogs like Charity Navigator and The Better Business Bureau.  Here is a list  of charities that meet BBB Wise Giving standards and are working in the Gulf Coast to help the people, the wildlife and the land itself.

You certainly can find a charity you like on this A-List of good guys — on the next page.

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