FEEA: Responding to Man-Made Disasters Since 1986
Thursday, June 30, 2011(National Federation of Federal Employees)
On April
19, 1995, a bomb detonated outside the Alfred
P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City,
destroying much of the building, including its
daycare center. More than 160 people lost
their lives that day, 99 of them civilian
federal employees, targeted because they worked
for the U.S. government. In the
days following this tragedy, Steve Bauer,
FEEA’s executive director, flew to Oklahoma to
see what help FEEA might be able to provide to
the survivors and the families of the
deceased.
Members
of the Federal Managers Association from Tinker
AFB had already set up a FEEA help desk at the
First Christian Church, designated as a site
for families to receive daily updates on rescue
efforts and help from relief
organizations. After two weeks on the
ground, manning the desk with the help of FMA
members, Bauer returned home having provided
more than $40,000 in checks to pay for
funerals, make mortgage payments, fly family
members in from out of town, and more. The
eventual total aid provided for similar needs
in the immediate aftermath was over
$150,000.
With the
incredible outpouring of support, donations
greatly exceeded the immediate needs of the
families and FEEA’s board voted to create a
special scholarship endowment to cover full
college costs – tuition, room & board,
books, fees, and travel expenses – for children
who lost a parent, as well as for the six
children from the daycare center who survived
the blast. With the help of the
Oklahoma City Community Development
Foundation’s Survivors Education Fund and the
Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education’s
Heartland Fund, FEEA has kept that promise for
the past 16 years. Of the 200 children who
qualified for assistance, more than 160 have
entered or completed college so far. The
youngest surviving child will likely begin
college studies in 2014.
Sadly,
just six years later, FEEA again had to respond
to a terrorist event that targeted federal
employees, this time at the Pentagon on
September 11, 2001. Immediate financial
assistance was provided on-site at the Pentagon
Family Assistance Center from September 12 –
October 10, 2001, with additional assistance
provided via telephone after the assistance
center closed. FEEA supported more than 40
family groups with over $400,000 for travel
expenses, mortgages, utility bills, funerals,
and more.
As with the Oklahoma City tragedy, the
outpouring of support exceeded the immediate
needs of the families and FEEA again set up a
special scholarship endowment for victims’
children.
Of the 68 family members registered, 43
have already completed their undergraduate
educations. The youngest child eligible
is expected to enter college in 2018.
Although
we all hope tragedies like these are never
repeated, FEEA must always be prepared to
respond to federal employees in need. Many
civilian feds serve in dangerous places around
the globe, side-by-side with our men and women
in uniform. Members of the Diplomatic
Corps were targeted in the African embassy
bombings of 1998, and others have been killed
in the line of duty in terrorist acts on
foreign soil. You can help ensure FEEA is
there the next time federal families need a
helping hand.
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 www.feea.org today and
click the “Give Now” button. Your
gift will truly make a
difference.
