Where are the donations being spent?
Press January 29th, 2009I want to take a moment and provide some clarification about where donations are going. A few times now the press has inaccurately reported about our campaign and so some clarification is needed.
All donations will be spent advertising on city transit systems with the possibility of a billboard advertisement in the future but that is not part of our initial campaign. We will be advertising in Halifax, Calgary, and Toronto. We will initially be spending $10,000 in Toronto, $5,000 in Calgary, and $5,000 in Halifax. We’ve received over $30,000 in donations and so the money not spent on initial advertisements will be used to prolong the first advertisements put up or to buy new advertisements in Toronto, Calgary, and Halifax. We do not want to spend all donations at once, we want the campaign to last as long as possible and ideally we would want it to continue indefinitely.
CityTV reported today that we are going to be spending “[...] tens of thousands of dollars in donations [...] to post similar ads in Calgary and Halifax.” [1] This is an error on their part as we made it clear to them that we would only be spending $5,000 in Halifax and $5,000 in Calgary. If we receive the financial support through donations then we will spend more to prolong the advertisements.
We’re aiming to put the Toronto advertisements up around mid-February (provided everything goes smooth in production). We are working with our contacts in Calgary and Halifax on rates and prices and we’re in the planning stages right now with regards to those two cities.
To ensure you have accurate information about the campaign please use our website, atheistbus.ca, as a primary source. I encourage you to read through the website FAQ and other pages on the website to learn more about the campaign.
Sources:
[1] – ‘No God’ Ads, Soon To Appear On TTC Vehicles, Spark Heated Debate – CityTV News - January 29th, 2009 – http://www.citynews.ca/news/news_31470.aspx





January 29th, 2009 at 7:54 pm
Toronto has nearly 10 times to population of Halifax, and a much higher transit ridership. Perhaps you should reconsider the proportions. I guess once you know the rates of different cities you’ll have a better idea of how much you should spend where.
January 29th, 2009 at 9:13 pm
Toronto, Halifax and Calgary are all good places to start. We may want to consider expanding into smaller towns and suburbs in the future where views aren’t often as progressive as in metropolitan centres. Presumably smaller towns will also have lower advertising rates.
January 29th, 2009 at 9:53 pm
I agree, but let’s not forget that the Ottawa-Gatineau area where I live is a metropolitan area of 1.2 million and I believe it is the fourth-largest metropolitan area in Canada (even if it is split over two provinces on either side of the Ottawa River) after Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. It has been my pleasure to donate $100 to this campaign. Keep up tghe good work everyone and let’s bring the campaign to Ottawa.
January 29th, 2009 at 10:00 pm
Three cheers for everyone connected with this campaign. I am 61 years old today and I never thought I would see the day when Canadian atheists would have the guts to stand up and make their opinion heard.
The next thing we could think about is a campaign showing who atheists are. Here is a cute idea: Each ad could pair up one atheist celebrity like Einstein, Katharine Hepburn or even Charles Schultz (the creator of “Peanuts”, who became a secular humanist at the end of his life) with one ordinary guy or gal from everyday life. Like Einstein and Joe ***** the accountant in Toronto, or whatever.
January 30th, 2009 at 1:06 am
I’m ectactic that the $100 I donated is going to help to bring the ads to Calgary. I want to thank everyone that’s involved with the campaign, and everyone that has donated to help show this overwhelming support.
It might be the first real time that I’ve felt a sense of community as an atheist in Western Canada.
January 30th, 2009 at 4:19 am
I personally would like to see adds on Durham region Transit, Durham has a population of 500 000 or more…
January 30th, 2009 at 4:21 am
Also, the donated ammounts don’t include the money from T-Shirts and all that stuff do they?
February 7th, 2009 at 7:36 am
I truly enjoyed your article and will link back from my site. Please post more often if you have time. Thanks!
February 13th, 2009 at 1:35 am
Nice weblog my friend, good job