Speedskater receives more than $30K in donations

Kelly Whiteside | USA TODAY Sports

Show Caption Hide Caption Olympian Emily Scott gets $35K in donations from web U.S. Speedskater Emily Scott says she wasn't expecting the support she got after telling her story to USA TODAY. She had to apply for food stamps after her stipend was cut and now donations are pouring in from all over.

Scott works part-time in Salt Lake City while training for the Olympics

Winter Games in Sochi%2C Russia%2C are seven months away

She says it%27s %27astonishing%27 that people care

When U.S. speedskater Emily Scott posted on the crowdfunding site, gofundme.com, she never thought this would happen. After reading about how her monthly stipend from US Speedskating was cut from $1950 to $600 and her wrenching decision to apply for food stamps, many responded with financial support.

Before USA TODAY Sports published her story, Scott had raised $190 in two months. By Wednesday morning, she had raised $33,400 and counting.

Scott, 24, who lives and trains in Salt Lake City, has a part-time job at a surgical supply factory to help make ends meet. (The job, with GE Healthcare, is through the Team USA Career Program.) She trains six days a week, about eight hours a day. The Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, are seven months away.

"It's so amazing," Scott said Tuesday night. "Strangers who don't even know me. I've written back to everyone who's donated trying to express my gratitude but I don't think I can say thank you enough. It's crazy.

"It's astonishing that people care that much. I thought my own governing body didn't' believe in me and for these strangers to believe in me, it felt really good."

When she learned about the outpouring after practice, she immediately called her dad, Craig, who raised his daughters as a single dad. "I cried to him. The whole time he's been telling me everything will work out. He said, 'I told you to keep believing.'"

Scott said when she initially posted on the web site, she didn't think she would get much response since there are several other speedskaters and potential Olympians also trying to raise money on the site. Fortunately, she was wrong.

"I'm still in a little bit of shock," she said. After being so focused on how to make ends meet, now she can concentrate on making the Olympic team. "I was able to breathe for a second and look at things a little bit differently and plan a little bit better about what I want to do to make the Sochi team."