I don't see specific dollar amounts either. And my hunch is because that (XX,XXX entries with $X per entry being given to charity equals X x XX,XXX dollars given to charities) isn't how they think of things. It looks like they fund their internal youth program (noted above) with excess revenues from the race (is that considered charitable giving if it's internal? Maybe, maybe not... I'm not sure what accepted non-profit accounting would say here, or if there even is any standard), and with the rest they support local youth sports organizations and a couple other causes, with probably a certain amount also put away for a rainy day. I can see how, in order not to misrepresent any giving or publicly announce a "giving" total that may not be impressive because some of their good works (including spending extra money directly on participants' experience at the race) may not count, they just wouldn't announce a total (and certainly not a $X/entry total, as that may vary greatly year-to-year).
I'm not sure what gives you this impression. It may be true and it may not. And whether it's true may also depend on how you account for certain things (as noted above. . . does running their own free youth program count as giving? Are only the hard programmatic costs giving, but not the staff or administrative costs?). If they were directly giving away a hugely impressive dollar amount annually they would probably shout about it from the rooftop, so I understand a certain degree of skepticism that they might not be doing that, but it also seems like an organization with such a good reputation in the running community should be given at least a small benefit of a doubt, whether they post an impressive top-line annual direct giving total or not (your mileage may vary on how far that benefit of a doubt gets them in this current or any other situation--it seems like it gets me further, and you less so).
That $186k number is what other charities have generated by using Grandma's as a fundraising platform. The charities got bibs and runners with those bibs fundraised for their partner charities. (Worth noting, as from your posts above I'm not sure you know this: Races like Grandma's support a lot of external charities in this way. I don't know whether it's more or less than they do through direct giving, but I know it's a substantial portion. And I know for at least one small non-running non-profit that I volunteer for charity bibs at major endurance sports events are a major annual funding source.) That's not direct monetary charitable giving from the race, and possibly you can discount it as "charity" that comes from Grandma's if you believe that if Grandma's didn't exist these non-profits would just find another equally-valuable fundraiser, but that's a little "invisible hand"-y for my taste (but again, YMMV). It seems like something that Grandma's should get some "credit" for to me.
It's a firmly-held belief of mine that everyone thinks everyone else's job is easier than it is, so unrelated to any of the charitable/cancellation handling issues, this is the sort of comment that always immediately causes me to push back as a reflex. In this case, I just looked up the number of employees at the first few races/organizations I could think of that I consider similar (acknowledging that there are surely substantial differences in how these organizations run that would only be known from the inside; all numbers are pulled from a page that lists their staff on their respective websites):
Houston Marathon- 12 employees
Twin Cities Marathon- 19 employees (plus several interns)
CIM- 11 employees
Pittsburgh Marathon- couldn't find page listing staff
Indianapolis Marathon- 9 employees (plus a Race Director who looks like he works for/owns a separate event management company)
Big Sur Marathon- 6 employees
So it seems like Grandma's 9 employees is pretty well in line with other similar organizations. Might all of these organizations be similar scams? I mean, sure? I guess? But that seems unlikely to me (and also seems like an indictment of all of their boards of directors).
Also worth noting is that, while to the national running community these organizations are known solely/mostly for their marathons, they all (Grandma's included) put on multiple other races and programs throughout the year (Grandma's race schedule can be found here:
https://grandmasmarathon.com/our-races/). So, leaving aside that figuring out how to navigate an organizational crisis while the entire world is disrupted probably gives these employees enough to do right now, I think that during normal times (and possibly also even right now) these employees are working year-round on these various projects and not sitting there twiddling their thumbs (any more than any of us do at our jobs). But again and one final time, YMMV on those thoughts, too.
HRE, I'm not sure if I'm one of the people you think your pasts have made mad? I'm not mad, and I'm trying to approach your posts with a spirit of generosity, but it seems to me like you're using performative ignorance and your genuine amiability to make the rather nasty suggestion that Grandma's is a self-dealing scam that doesn't justify its non-profit status. While I think a healthy dose of skepticism is a good thing, it feels like your posts go well beyond that, and the motivation for that puzzles me. Maybe I'm being naive, but it feels like you're being overly cynical (and using this crisis which people are unhappy with their handling of as an opportunity to further erode their confidence in the organization as a whole, in even less-trying times).
Lastly, neither of us has all the answers, but it feels like you could try a little harder to find them rather than come on here and ask leading questions to which answers or at least a substantial amount of relevant data are readily available in literally the first place you should think to look for it online (Grandma's own website). That way your leading questions would at least be more informed, and thus more credible.
(Also, I acknowledge that I'm ascribing motivations to you that I can't know. If you genuinely don't know anything about this, I'm sorry for getting those motivations wrong, but you seem like a guy who's pretty knowledgeable about running in so many of your other posts that near-complete ignorance on this topic would be shocking to me).