Orlando Sentinel

All on campus

All on campus Feb. 14 will get some amount of money

- By Ron Hurtibise Staff Writer

during the Parkland shooting are eligible for a portion of a victims’ fund created after the attack, according to a distributi­on plan.

Everyone who was on the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School campus during the Feb. 14 mass shooting will be eligible for a share of the victims’ fund the Broward Education Foundation created.

That decision is in a final plan for distributi­on of the Stoneman Douglas Victims’ Fund, which so far totals $8.2 million from more than 36,000 donors.

How much money each person will receive won’t be decided until after June 30, once the number of eligible recipients and the total amount of donations are known, said Jeff Dion, director of the National Compassion Fund, which will administer the distributi­on.

The money was raised through the crowdfundi­ng website GoFundMe.com, as well as outside fundraisin­g activities such as benefit concerts, employer campaigns, and pledges by retail establishm­ents to donate shares of purchase prices.

About 3,200 students were on campus the day of the shootings, according to Broward County Public Schools records. Also eligible will be about 225 staff members who work at the school, including teachers, custodians, food service workers and administra­tors.

Those eligible must apply at NationalCo­mpassionFu­nd.org by May 31.

Applicants will be verified through attendance records.

The finalized plan creates four categories of eligibilit­y: Applicants for deceased

victims (in most cases, next-ofkin such as parents, children or spouses) Victims grazed or shot by bullets (17 gunshot victims have been identified) Anyone who was inside the

1200 building, where the shootings took place (Dion said about 750 victims were inside the building)

Anyone else who was on

campus during the shootings. Within each category, all eligible recipients will receive equal amounts of money, Dion said. But no decisions have been made about how much money will be allocated to each category beyond that “the highest category” of payment will go to the designated representa­tives of the 17 people who died.

The money will be given as a gift with no strings attached, the steering committee has said.

In a written introducti­on to the final plan, steering committee chairman George LeMieux wrote: “This Fund does not exist in a vacuum; it is merely one part of an ongoing continuum of care in response to this atrocity.”

Immediate assistance was made available through Florida’s crime victim compensati­on program and “a myriad of crowdsourc­ed funding sites,” while “long-term government­al and community assistance will likely be provided, though it may take up to 18-24 months for that assistance to become available. This Fund offers assistance in the medium term, to bridge the gap.”

The distributi­on formula is patterned after others developed by the National Compassion Fund after the Las Vegas concert shooting in October 2017, the Pulse nightclub shootings in Orlando in June 2016 and others.

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