Nearly 300 individuals and groups stepped up in April to raise the money just 22 hours after a GoFundMe page launched, including $1,000 from Aurora’s New England Congregational Church.

The surge in donations came after Indivisible Aurora, the nonprofit group behind the Aurora Pride Parade, reversed its decision to scrap the parade just five days after announcing the cancellation.

“Based on the outpouring of feedback and commitment expressed over this weekend it doesn’t surprise me as much as instill me with a wonderful sense of awe,” Chuck Adams, executive director of Indivisible Aurora, told GoPride in April. “The community stepped up in a way we didn’t think possible prior to the cancellation.”

The $17,000 was the gap between the group’s prior fundraising and what it needed to give the city for services and for operational costs to service providers. Indivisible Aurora said the city needed a final decision on the parade by April 30th for police and first responder staffing.

Indivisible Aurora had initially blamed the cancellation on a new city ordinance that increased the costs of the parade alone four times what it was the previous year.

Aurora’s 2018 Pride Parade was a big success in the Western Chicago suburb. “Last year we brought 10,000-12,000 people to downtown on a very hot Father’s Day,” said Adams. “This year we hope to increase it to 15,000-20,000 now that we aren’t on Father Day.”

The success of last year’s parade inspired similar efforts in other Chicago-area communities including Buffalo Grove, Naperville, Bolingbrook, Mokena, Joliet and Muncie, Indiana.

Related: Buffalo Grove Pride Parade a success, will return in 2020

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