FEEA: 25 Years of Helping Feds with Everyday Emergencies
Friday, June 17, 2011(Federal Employee Education & Assistance Fund)
Recent
severe weather across the southern U.S. has
focused attention on communities hard-hit by
tornadoes and flooding.
Residents of the Alabama and Missouri
towns recovering from F4 and F5 tornadoes have
a long road ahead of them, as do those living
along the flood plains of the Mississippi
River.
David
Ladd, a hydrologist/GIS specialist at USGS at
the Tennessee Water Science Center, has
particular empathy for those in the path of
current flooding. In May 2010, Ladd’s home in
Nashville filled with two feet of water after
days of heavy rains followed by rivers cresting
well above flood-stage. Ladd’s
home is not in an area previously deemed at
high risk for flooding, so he had no flood
insurance at the time (though he certainly does
now).
“This was a 500-year event, meaning
there’s only about a 0.2% chance of it
happening in any given year,” said Ladd, “I had
to rip out all the carpet and redo walls up
four feet from the floor…it took about five
months to get it back in shape, and we were
lucky to have a second floor we could live in
during that time.”
While
many charities were there to help with
immediate needs like clean drinking water and
temporary shelter, Ladd said not many were
equipped to help with longer-term recovery and
rebuilding. At the point when most
people needed financial help to make up the
difference between FEMA grants, insurance and
rebuilding costs, there just weren’t many
places to go. Ladd heard a neighbor
talking about how his company was raising money
to help employees and began to wonder if his
own employer had any sort of similar
program.
His search led him to FEEA’s emergency
assistance program and he applied for and
received a disaster relief
grant.
Now
David Ladd is part of a team helping to map
flood plains and determine which areas will
flood as spillways are opened to avert greater
disaster.
He hopes federal colleagues along the
Mississippi know about FEEA and will seek
disaster relief when they need it. He has
flood insurance himself and this year
designated his CFC donation to FEEA to ensure
help is there for other feds faced with tough
times.
For 25
years, FEEA has been there to help federal
families when natural disasters strike. From
$50,000 to 500 families after Hurricane Andrew
(1992) to $46,000 in grants to feds who lost
homes and other property in the Los Alamos
wildfires (2000) and on to $1.8 million for
feds in the Gulf Coast after the triple-punch
of Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma (2005),
FEEA has supported federal families as they
recover from disasters. Today,
FEEA is helping federal families across the
southern states, with more than $21,000 to 34
families in the first weeks after April’s
massive tornadoes.
At the
same time, the recession has impacted federal
families no less than other Americans. Job
losses, rising prices, and plummeting home
values have led to three years of increasing
requests for emergency loans. A
program that provided $164,000 in loans and
grants in 2007 was up to $276,000 in 2008 and
just closed the 2011 fiscal year having made
over $500,000 in no-interest loans. With
additional financial pressures sure to impact
federal families, your help is needed now to
ensure FEEA can continue to provide assistance
every time it’s needed.
Please show your support for FEEA’s 25-year tradition of federal employees helping federal employees by making a donation of $25 or more now. Thanks to a generous grant from the BlueCross/BlueShield Association the first $25,000 in individual donations during this campaign will be matched by BCBS, giving your donation twice the impact. Help FEEA reach its $100,000 goal and sustain the programs that matter most to federal families. Go to http://www.feea.org/ today and click the “Give Now” button. Your gift will truly make a difference.
