Albuquerque Journal

Navajo Nation leaders approve funding to help with funerals

$3,500 available to families facing death expenses related to COVID-19

- BY NOEL LYN SMITH

FARMINGTON — Navajo Nation leaders approved a bill to allocate $2 million in supplement­al funding to help families with funeral expenses related to a COVID-19 death.

In February, the tribe’s Division of Social Services requested the money for its COVID-19 burial assistance because the resource was close to depleting its funding.

Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez and Vice President Myron Lizer on April 9 signed the bill that will transfer $2 million from the Unreserved Undesignat­ed Fund Balance to the division.

“For every life lost there are family members who grieve their loss, and we continue to pray for their comfort,” they wrote in a memorandum to Speaker Seth Damon.

There have been 1,262 deaths related to COVID-19 for the tribe as of April 10. Nez and Lizer said they understand the virus will take more lives.

“The division has worked tirelessly in finding sources of funding to help our people, but those sources are limited. We thank the Navajo council for supporting the division and their work,” the president and vice president wrote.

Delegate Pernell Halona, who sponsored the bill, told the Navajo Nation Council that the division has received 1,519 requests for assistance as of March 26.

“In some situations, more than one family member were lost and it imposed tremendous financial hardship, crisis on the loved ones that are left behind,” Halona said.

Deannah Neswood-Gishey, the division’s executive director, told delegates that the COVID-19 burial assistance resource was started during the pandemic and prior to its establishm­ent, the division used federal funding provided to its pre-existing burial assistance program.

That pre-existing program capped assistance at $2,500 for a standard funeral and families had to use mortuaries that have contracts with the tribe, Neswood-Gishey explained.

The COVID-19 burial assistance provides $3,500 and there is no requiremen­t to use mortuaries that have agreements with the tribe, she said adding that the division has helped families from California, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Texas.

After the council passed the bill March 26, they directed the division to “take all steps necessary” to fund or reimburse up to $3,500 to families who did not apply for or were denied COVID-19 related burial assistance through the Federal Emergency Management Agency or because they did not use mortuaries that have contracts with the tribe.

The directive also stated families who received $2,500 are eligible for the additional $1,000.

In the memorandum from Nez and Lizer, they mentioned that they anticipate working on the offer by FEMA for funeral assistance as a separate source of funding for tribal members.

“The Division of Social Services is working on how applicatio­ns are processed and will provide that informatio­n to all. We continue our fight against the monster virus, and we offer our prayers for all Navajo people for their continued health and safety,” they wrote.

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