Few nonprofit leaders would consider 2009 an ideal time to start up a charity. But Alison Tepper Singer isn’t letting the recession deter her. What she believes is an important gap in autism research can’t wait for the economy to rebound, she says.
Ms. Singer created the Autism Science Foundation, in Scarsdale, N.Y., in April, after resigning as a top official of one of the country’s biggest and best-known autism charities. The departure was prompted by a disagreement over a hot-button topic: whether to support research into a possible link between vaccines and the onset of autism.
Ms. Singer sees inquiry into vaccines as a red herring that diverts money from other research. “That question has been asked and answered, and the answer is, No,” she says. “One more dollar in that area is one dollar too many. It’s time to move on and support science that will yield new and useful information.”
Her former employer, Autism Speaks, in New York, believes vaccine research remains a small but important area to investigate. “If there are unanswered questions of science, we will explore them,” says Mark Roithmayr, the group’s president.
Fund Raising a Challenge
Ms. Singer’s new autism charity joins an alphabet soup of organizations — most of which were formed in the past decade or so — raising money, seeking attention, and tackling the disorder from different angles, based on competing ideas about its cause, treatments, and potential cures. Just two dozen groups existed in 1999, and now there are more than 100.
Charity observers say the newest group faces the tough task of carving out its niche and getting its very specific, though nuanced, message out to a broad audience in an already crowded field. And they say how the organization fares may provide clues about whether donors have the will or the means during a recession to support so many charities. “All of the challenges a new organization faces are made more severe by this economy,” says Bob Harrington, director of the strategic restructuring practice at La Piana Consulting, in Oakland, Calif. “There’s a risk in splitting the potential funding community in too many pieces, especially when money is tight, but, like any new organization, it has to make its compelling case for why people should support it over the others.”
Ms. Singer says she intends to keep the Autism Science Foundation extremely lean, with no paid employees and an office in the basement of her home.
The seeds of the new group were planted shortly after Ms. Singer resigned from Autism Speaks, frustrated that even its relatively small investment in vaccine studies was a waste of money and that it wasn’t doing enough to counter the increasingly vocal people urging parents to skip vaccines out of concern that they cause autism. She says many parents who blame vaccines for autism choose not to have their children immunized against other diseases, such as mumps and measles, and they often turn to alternative and, some would say, risky treatments to try to cure the disorder.
Autism is a complex brain disorder, ranging from mild to severe, that affects behavior and impairs social and communication skills. No one knows exactly what causes it — though many scientists believe it is largely genetic, with perhaps some environmental components — or how to prevent it, cure it, or fully treat it. The incidence of autism has been rising fast in the past couple of decades, with the latest estimates saying that as many as one child in every 150 has the disorder.
News Spread Quickly
Whether donors will embrace yet another autism charity remains to be seen.
Adrian M. Jones, who serves on the board of the more-established Autism Speaks, worries that the creation of new groups will simply splinter the autism field.
“Is the community better with Coke and Pepsi? I don’t think so,” says Mr. Jones, a managing director at Goldman Sachs. “There’s enormous merit in serving the community as one entity, bringing everyone in together, driving hard in a coordinated way toward what we all want: getting our kids educated, getting them health care and home care, and, eventually, an understanding of autism, its causes, and how to treat it.”
The Autism Science Foundation, however, is betting that potential donors will appreciate its role as an alternative.
News of Ms. Singer’s resignation from Autism Speaks spread quickly throughout the busy Web sites, blogs, and online discussion lists for people interested in autism.
So many people contacted her, Ms. Singer says, thanking her for taking a stand and entreating her to start a new charity that she felt inspired to do so.
Ms. Singer worked with Karen London, another longtime autism-research advocate who had experience starting a charity. Fifteen years ago, Ms. London started the National Alliance for Autism Research, which merged with Autism Speaks in 2006.
So far, the Autism Science Foundation has relied heavily on word-of-mouth, e-mail messages, and social-networking sites, like Facebook, to introduce itself to potential supporters. When it announced its formation in the spring, it also kicked off what it calls its First 100 Days campaign, a mostly friends-asking-friends effort.
Ms. Singer says the group already has hundreds of donors and volunteers but that it’s still too early to make public its finances or share plans for future fund-raising efforts. She says donors appreciate that the organization has pledged that every dollar raised will go directly to grants, which the organization expects to start making by the end of the year.
Louise Bach Capps, from Mechanicsville, Va., whose 5-year-old son has autism, started a Facebook group for parents of autistic children interested in the new organization that has attracted more than 430 members. She says she got involved as soon as she heard about the Autism Science Foundation.
“I’m happy to be involved now with like-minded people interested in really hearing the science,” Ms. Capps says.
Ms. Singer is not naïve, about what it will take to turn the group into something bigger.
As a former producer in the broadcasting industry, she knows the importance of communications, she says, and as a key part of the Autism Speaks team that helped to turn the puzzle piece into a recognizable symbol of autism, she understands marketing and developing a recognizable brand name. She says that for now the group needs to lean on its message against vaccine research, but she hopes to be able to move past that over time and attract anyone interested in supporting autism research.
Alison Singer is President of the Autism Science Foundation. Visit www.AutismScienceFoundation.org to learn more about the Autism Science Foundation. Ms. Singer can be reached at asinger@autismsciencefoundation.org.
This article was originally published in the Chronicle of Philanthropy in August 2009 and is reprinted with permission.