Donors pay death benefits to military families during shutdown
The Fisher House Foundation and private donors will pay military family death benefits during the government shutdown. And other philanthropists are helping keep Head Start programs running.
The Fisher House Foundation and private donors will pay military family death benefits during the government shutdown. And other philanthropists are helping keep Head Start programs running.
The Department of Defense (DOD), with a half-trillion-dollar budget, has turned to a nonprofit with $48.5 million in revenue to help it pay $100,000 in death benefits to families of military employees who have died since the federal government shutdown.
But the Fisher House Foundation was not alone in its concern for helping the Pentagon. Once the deal was announced on Wednesday, 1,200 people called the Rockville, Md.-based nonprofit and pledged a total of $160,000 on Wednesday to help the organization support those military families.
鈥淚t鈥檚 humbling,鈥 said David Coker, president of the Fisher House Foundation. 鈥淎merica is a grateful nation. Sometimes the bureaucracy gets in the way.鈥
The organization, which builds comfort homes for veterans to use at military medical facilities, has established a $4 million emergency fund that will pay the death benefits to the families of 29 fallen military employees, Mr. Coker said.
This is not entirely new for the foundation. Its founder, Zachary Fisher, used to send $10,000 to $20,000 to families in the 1980s to hold them over until the federal government paid the benefits, which normally can take several days.
On Tuesday, when Mr. Coker and the foundation鈥檚 chief executive, Kenneth Fisher, heard that the death benefits were not going to be covered because of the shutdown, they knew they had to do something.
Sen. Joe Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat, called and gave them that chance by linking them with the Pentagon.
鈥淚t鈥檚 simply the right thing to do,鈥 Mr. Coker said.
The deal with the Pentagon came a day after Houston philanthropists Laura and John Arnold provided $10-million to keep 13 Head Start programs from closing. The first seven programs, serving nearly 7,000 children, had been closed Oct. 1 but are reopening thanks to the Arnolds鈥 interest-free loan to the National Head Start Association.
The group will repay the money once the federal government supports the programs again after the shutdown. Another six programs are slated to be closed Oct. 11 and are working with the national association to get the money they need to stay open, said Sally Aman, a spokeswoman for the national association.
The Pentagon has also told the Fisher House Foundation that it will repay the nonprofit once the government reopens.
But Mr. Coker said the nonprofit鈥檚 main concern is the families.
鈥淭hey have paid a tremendous price, and we should not be adding a financial burden to that,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t would be great if the DOD could find a way to reimburse us. But at this point our focus is on the families.鈥
鈥 This article聽originally appeared on the website of The Chronicle of Philanthropy.