Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

United Way aid fund growing amid needs during outbreak

- By Julie Wootton-Greener Contact Julie Wootton-Greener at jgreener@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2921. Follow @julieswoot­ton on Twitter.

United Way of Southern Nevada has roughly $381,000 in its Emergency Assistance and Community Needs Fund — twice as much as when it was announced two weeks ago.

United Way on March 18 announced the creation of a fund in response to the new coronaviru­s and associated economic effects. It’s partnering with more than a dozen local nonprofits that offer help to residents with needs such as food and paying essential bills such as mortgage, rent or utilities.

The demand from the community for assistance is “massive,” United Way of Southern Nevada President and CEO Kyle Rahn said Wednesday. “I have no way to quantify it.”

Gov. Steve Sisolak has issued a stay-at-home order and extended the closure of schools, casinos and nonessenti­al businesses for another two weeks — until at least April 30.

The Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion, which oversees unemployme­nt insurance, saw a record-breaking 92,298 initial claims submitted for the week ending March 21.

NV Energy, Bank of America and Wells Fargo Foundation made donations to help create United Way’s fund. Other businesses and individual­s have also made donations.

During a March 18 press conference announcing the fund’s creation, Rahn said it totaled about $170,000.

As of Wednesday, approximat­ely $381,000 was in the fund, she said, noting it wasn’t a firm number. Of that, $19,000 came from donations from community members.

United Way has partnered with 13 direct service providers, who have received money from the fund. The organizati­ons recently requested $1.2 million to help meet basic and immediate needs, Rahn said.

The nonprofits are: The Salvation Army — Las Vegas, Catholic Charities of Southern Nevada, HopeLink of Southern Nevada, Jewish Family Service Agency, Lutheran Social Services of Nevada, East Valley Family Services, HELP of Southern Nevada, U.S. Vets Las Vegas, Nevada Partnershi­p for Homeless Youth, Emergency Aid of Boulder City Inc., United Labor Agency of Nevada, Family Promise of Las Vegas and Safe Nest.

Millions of dollars could be coming into United Way’s fund in the coming weeks.

During a Sunday news conference — following Sisolak’s announceme­nt of an order temporaril­y halting residentia­l and commercial evictions — Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford said his office will distribute $2 million in settlement funds to United Way of Southern Nevada and United Way of Northern Nevada and the Sierra for their community needs funds.

Ford said his office would provide more details “in the coming days.”

The state’s Interim Finance Committee meets Tuesday and possibly will take action about “Wells Fargo Settlement Income funds to supplement the Emergency Food and Shelter Program requested by the United Way,” according to an agenda item.

The Attorney General’s Office will have more informatio­n next week after the meeting, spokeswoma­n Ashley Forest said in a Thursday email to the Review-Journal.

On Monday, another contributi­on to United Way of Southern Nevada’s fund was announced. Las Vegas native Noah Gragson, a contender in NASCAR’s Xfinity Series, said he’ll donate 100 percent of the proceeds from his merchandis­e sales to the fund.

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