From The Asian Reporter, V32, #1 (January 3, 2022),
page 7.
Federal program offers cash to cover COVID-19
funeral costs
By Steve LeBlanc
The Associated Press
BOSTON — When Wanda Olson’s son-in-law died in March after
contracting COVID-19, she and her daughter had to grapple with
more than just their sudden grief. They had to come up with
money for a cremation.
Even without a funeral, the bill came to nearly $2,000, a
hefty sum that Olson initially covered. She and her daughter
then learned of a federal program that reimburses families up to
$9,000 for funeral costs for loved ones who died of COVID-19.
Olson’s daughter submitted an application to the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), received a deposit by June,
and was able to reimburse her mother the $1,974.
"Had this not been available, we would have been paying the
money ourselves," said Olson, 80, of Villa Rica, Georgia. "There
wasn’t any red tape. This was a very easy, well-handled
process."
As of December 6, about 226,000 people had shared in the
nearly $1.5 billion that FEMA has spent on funeral costs that
occurred after January 20, 2020, the date of the first confirmed
case of COVID-19 in the U.S. With the nation’s coronavirus death
toll topping 825,000, it’s clear that many families who are
eligible for reimbursement have yet to take advantage of the
funeral benefit.
Her son-in-law was travelling a lot, working on air
conditioning systems in theaters, restaurants, and businesses,
when he began feeling ill, Olson said. After a few days at home,
he went to the hospital and was put on a ventilator. He died
several weeks later.
"He could never overcome it," she said.
To be eligible for reimbursement, death certificates for
those who died after May 16, 2020, must indicate that the death
was attributed to COVID-19.
For deaths that occurred in the early months of the pandemic
— from January 20 to May 16, 2020 — death certificates must be
accompanied with a signed statement from a medical examiner,
coroner, or the certifying official listed on the certificate
indicating that COVID-19 was the cause or a contributing cause
of death.
The percentage of individuals who have been reimbursed varies
dramatically from state to state — from nearly 40% in North
Carolina and Maryland to fewer than 15% in Idaho and Oregon,
according to state-by-state data compiled by FEMA.
While the reimbursement must go directly to individuals, some
funeral directors have taken on the task of informing grieving
families of the benefit.
After the benefit was first announced, David Shipper, owner
of the Sunset Funeral Home, Cremation Center & Cemetery in
Evansville, Indiana, took out ads to let people know that help
was available if they qualified.
"Nine thousand dollars — that’s a lot of money. We wanted to
find a way to tell people about it," he said. "We stopped
advertising some time ago, but when we have a new family with a
death from COVID, we tell them about the program."
Workers at the home will sit down with families, gather the
needed paperwork, contact FEMA on the phone, and help walk them
through the process if they ask, he said.
Many families may simply be unaware of the benefit, but
others may opt against seeking the cash out of reluctance to
revisit the pain of the death, Shipper said. He said the better
time to seek the help is when planning the funeral.
"They’re much more likely to take advantage right then than
if they’ve already spent the money and don’t want to open it up
again," Shipper said.
The largest states account for some of the biggest shares of
the FEMA reimbursement money.
The program has paid out more than 21,000 reimbursements in
California and Texas, which have both reported more than 74,000
COVID-19 deaths. Residents applied for more than $141 million in
each state.
The fewest number of reimbursements have occurred in Vermont,
where 123 people were awarded a total of about $704,000.
Expenses covered under the FEMA program include funeral
services, cremation, and interment, as well as the costs for
caskets or urns, burial plots, or cremation niches, markers or
headstones, transportation or transfer of remains, clergy or
officiant services, and the use of funeral home equipment or
staff.
The program has been funded using federal stimulus funds, and
money remains available. No online applications are allowed.
After all required documents are received and verified, it
typically takes fewer than 30 days to determine if an individual
is eligible, according to FEMA. Once eligibility is confirmed,
applicants who request direct deposit may receive the money in a
matter of days. It may take longer for applicants who request a
check.
The reimbursement is one way of helping ease the emotional
and financial burden that the pandemic has wreaked on
communities across the country, according to Ellen Wynn McBrayer,
president of Jones-Wynn Funeral Homes & Crematory in Villa Rica,
Georgia.
She recalled one woman who lost her mother, husband, and one
of her children to the disease in the span of six months. One of
the workers at the funeral home also succumbed to the virus.
"To have to help a grieving family is hard on a normal day,
but to see so many deaths," she said. "COVID has just broken a
lot of hearts and taken a lot of lives."