Las Vegas Review-Journal

1,300 apply for Victims of Crime aid

Unpreceden­ted level of demand for fund

- By Sean Whaley and Nicole Raz Las Vegas Review-journal

About 1,300 people have filed applicatio­ns seeking assistance from Nevada’s Victims of Crime program as a result of the Oct. 1 mass shooting in Las Vegas.

The fund, which has about

$12 million, is used to pay for a variety of services, including medical bills, funerals and counseling. Fund payouts are capped at $35,000 per individual, but it issues cash only for lost wages and reimbursab­le expenses, program manager Rebecca Salazar said.

The demand for the fund is unpreceden­ted, Salazar said, and far exceeds the more than 550 people killed or injured at the Route 91 Harvest festival.

The program covers counseling expenses for those who attended the shooting and weren’t hurt but need such services, which could explain the high number of applicatio­ns, she said.

“We have a process to follow to ensure any payments we make are for legitimate expenses,” Salazar said.

The applicatio­n

To apply for aid, victims must complete a five-page applicatio­n and submit related receipts from expenses that need to be reimbursed or bills that need to paid. The applicatio­n also asks applicants to attach the crime-related police report.

In fiscal year 2017, it took about eight days to approve an applicatio­n when submitted without a police report. If a report was included, it took about 27 hours. Payments typically start within four weeks and can begin before services for a victim are complete.

California­ns made up more than half of the 58 people killed. Only seven concertgoe­rs lived in Nevada, six of whom were from the Las Vegas Valley. Salazar said her office does not yet have data on where the applicants live.

“We will have that informatio­n available at a later date, but for now we are focused on processing the large volume of applicatio­ns we are receiving,” she said.

California victims

Salazar said Nevada is working with the California Victim Compensati­on Board to assist California

To apply for help, visit http://voc.nv.gov. Completed, signed applicatio­ns, forms and documents can be emailed to applicatio­ns@voc-net.com, faxed to 888-941-7890 or mailed to VOCP, P.O. Box 94525, Las Vegas, NV 89193-1525.

Hospital and ambulance bills Vision prosthetic­s and eyeglass

Medical and dental treatment replacemen­t

Mental health counseling Home health care

Wage or income loss Prescripti­on medication

Funeral and burial expenses Home security repair

Loss of support, for dependents of a deceased victim

Emergency shelter and relocation costs

Insurance co-payments

Crime scene cleanup

Medically necessary equipment such as a wheelchair

Child care costs incurred because of the crime

residents affected by the shooting.

California residents are eligible to apply for benefits — but not for the same expense — from both Nevada’s and California’s programs, said Julie Nauman, executive officer of the compensati­on board in California.

Janice Mackey, a board spokeswoma­n, said the board has received 924 applicatio­ns related to the shooting as of Friday. Nauman said her office receives 50,000 to 60,000 applicatio­ns in a typical year. Nauman couldn’t say how much is in the fund, but she said the board administer­ed $53 million in the last fiscal year.

“This is not going to be a normal year,” she said, adding that between the wildires in Northern California and the Las Vegas shooting, her team is spread very thin.

The California victims of crime website has a link at the top of its page that answers questions for victims of the Route 91 attack: “Were you or a family member there? We can help,” the site says.

California, the site says, offers aid “whether or not you were injured in the attack. Even if you have no expenses today, we encourage you to apply now in case you incur expenses in the future, such as counseling.”

Legal aid

Barbara Buckley, executive director of the Legal Aid Center of Southern Nevada, said her agency received about 180 inquiries about financial help following the shooting.

“So when we saw people with financial issues, we referred them all to the Victims of Crime program,” she said.

The legal aid center is still getting such inquiries and will help victims apply, Buckley said. The center also

Expenses for lost or stolen property or cash

Property damage

Any expense not directly related to the crime

Any expense payable by insurance or any other source

Damages for pain and suffering

will help with appeals if legitimate applicatio­ns are denied, she said.

The agency recently helped a good Samaritan who took shooting victims to the hospital, Buckley said. The man’s car was shot and his insurance company denied a damage claim, saying he was at fault, she said.

VOC financing

The Victims of Crime program took in 3,093 applicatio­ns in fiscal year 2017, which ended June 30. Of that number, 2,558 were approved; 11 applicatio­ns were still awaiting a decision as of June 30. That was an increase of 114 applicatio­ns over fiscal year 2016.

In all, $13.2 million in benefits was provided to victims last fiscal year. Of this total, $4.66 million came from the fund. An additional $8.56 million was covered through cost containmen­t efforts and other practices. For example, a provision in the Affordable Health Care Act allows victims of crime to qualify retroactiv­ely for Medicaid benefits.

The fund is financed primarily by fines and penalties paid by convicted offenders, not by tax dollars.

A similar fund helped victims of the Pulse nightclub mass shooting in Orlando, Florida, in 2016. The federal Office for Victims of Crime awarded an $8.5 million grant for the shooting victims in 2017. The funding was used to support the victims, families and communitie­s affected by the attack.

Contact Sean Whaley at swhaley@ reviewjour­nal.com or 775-461-3820. Follow @seanw801 on Twitter. Contact Nicole Raz at nraz@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4512. Follow @Journalist­nikki on Twitter.

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