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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
December 20, 2001
Fire Fighters 9-11 Fund
Assisting Families of Fallen NY Brothers
Union Fund Disbursing $278,000 to
Each Family This Week
Washington, D.C., Dec. 20, 2001 – The International Association of Fire
Fighters and its two New York affiliates have started distributing the
remaining proceeds from the New York Firefighters 9-11 Disaster Relief Fund
they created on September 12. The $111 million raised by the non-profit fund
is earmarked for the families of the 344 fire fighters who were killed in
the line of duty at the World Trade Center on September 11.
The 9-11 Fund directors – composed of the presidents and treasurers of
the IAFF, Uniformed Fire Fighters Local 94 and Uniformed Fire Officers Local
854 – voted this week to disperse checks for $278,703.56 to each of the
families of FDNY fire fighters and a fire patrolman who were killed in the
tragedy. This brings the total assistance provided to each of the families
to $323,703.56, according to IAFF General President Harold Schaitberger, who
serves as president of the 9-11 Fund board of directors. Any additional
donations received by the 9-11 fund will be disbursed at a later date.
“The outpouring of support and assistance from fire fighters around the
world, from the corporate community, from celebrities, and from the public
has been overwhelming,” Schaitberger said. “We thank the American people
from the bottom of our hearts for their generosity and their love.”
“Amid the controversy that has been associated with so many of the
September 11 funds, we have worked quietly and without fanfare to provide
significant support to the widows, families, and loved ones of our fallen
New York fire fighters,” Schaitberger said. “Through boot drives and many
other activities, a quarter-million IAFF members have worked on behalf of
these families with the same single-minded determination that was
demonstrated by the thousands of New York fire fighters who risked or gave
their lives at the World Trade Center.”
“No amount of money can repay these widows and families for the sacrifice
they’ve made,” said Local 94 President Kevin Gallagher. “We can only try as
best we can to help them go on with their lives, despite their tremendous
and permanent loss.”
Local 854 President Peter Gorman said the union was able to act rapidly
to assist the families. “I am proud that our 9-11 Fund was able to move
quickly to put much needed funds in the hands of the families,” he said.
“Within 10 days of the September 11 tragedy we provided each family with
$10,000. We followed up with $10,000 more within three weeks, and we gave
them each $25,000 just before Thanksgiving.”
More than 70 percent of the $111 million raised by the New York
Firefighters 9-11 Disaster Relief Fund has been collected by fire fighters
and paramedics who belong to the IAFF across the U.S. and Canada. In some
cases, citizens have dropped checks as large as $10,000 into the boots used
by fire fighters in their fund drives or sought out local fire fighters in
their fire stations to hand over donations. Since September 11, local
affiliates of the IAFF have regularly sent in checks amounting to hundreds
of thousands of dollars, Schaitberger said.
Major corporations, retailers, individual donors, websites, and other
labor unions also assisted and contributed to the 9-11 Fund. From the very
beginning, the 9-11 Fund directors made a firm decision that they would
conduct no advertising, solicitations, or marketing activities to promote
the fund.
Schaitberger noted that, in the end, the Fund’s expenses will amount to
less than one-half of one percent because the Fund used IAFF staff to manage
the project and much of the outside assistance to the fund was provided on a
pro bono basis.
The IAFF and its two New York local unions are grateful for the support
of a concerned public, but they also want to remind Americans that there
were many other victims of the tragedy who also need help and support. “We
cannot forget the thousands of innocent victims who lost their lives at the
World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and in a rural field in Pennsylvania. Nor
can we forget the tens of thousands of workers who lost their jobs because
of the economic impact of the terrorist attack,” Schaitberger said. “We are
all in this together and we must make sure that their families receive the
support that they need.”
The IAFF has more than 2,700 affiliates, representing fire fighters in
more than 3,500 communities. The 250,000 members of the IAFF are the
nation’s full-time professional fire fighters and paramedics, who protect
the lives and property of 80 percent of the nation’s population. For more
information on the IAFF visit the website at www.iaff.org.
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