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WASHINGTON - The American Red Cross said today it will use all the money
donated to the Liberty Fund for victims of the terrorist attacks,
reversing a plan to set aside some of the money for other needs.
The Liberty Fund has collected $543 million. The Red Cross had planned
to put about $200 million aside for use in the event of future terrorist
attacks. That move drew a sharp rebuke from critics, who said the money
donated to the fund was given under the assumption only people affected
by the Sept. 11 attacks would get it.
"We deeply regret that our actions over the last eight weeks have not
been as sharply focused as the American public wants or the victims of
this tragedy deserve," Red Cross interim CEO Harold Decker said at a
news conference.
The Red Cross has stopped accepting donations to the fund, saying the
amount collected so far is sufficient. The charity already has
distributed about $121 million in direct aid to Sept. 11 victims and
their families.
Red Cross President Bernadine Healy is stepping down as head of the
charity at the end of the year in part because of criticism of the fund.
Healy took the unusual step of setting up the fund as a separate account
to deal with the attacks, over the objections of some Red Cross board
members.
Healy was lambasted at a House hearing on charitable contributions last
week after two widows who lost their husbands in the World Trade Center
attack described how they have had to fight a maze of bureaucracy to
obtain financial help.
Lawmakers from both parties said they believed donors to the Liberty
Fund contributed as generously as they did because they thought their
money would be channeled quickly and directly to the victims and
families of the attacks.
Since Sept. 11, about 2,500 families have received Liberty Fund
benefits, averaging about $25,000 per household. On Monday, the Red
Cross said it would return donations to any contributor who requests a
refund.
The 37,000-employee American Red Cross administers almost half the
nation's blood supply and provides relief to victims of disasters.
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