Community Corner

Holocaust Survivor Program Faces $200K Shortfall

Jewish Social Service Agency program supports 225 elderly clients.

is calling for donations to help offset “critical funding shortfalls” in the Rockville-based nonprofit’s Holocaust Survivor Program.

The nearly 20-year-old program provided basic “safety net” services for 225 Holocaust survivors last year. Such services include personal in-home care and housekeeping, health and social services and financial aid.

As aging clients increasingly rely on the program for services, funding from traditional sources such as Claims Conference grants, matching JSSA funds and aid from is drying up, according to the agency’s Web site.

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The sagging economy also has meant a decrease in donations to the program.

“This year alone, JSSA is facing a $200,000 shortfall and we expect the deficit to grow annually for at least another 10 years,” reads a message on the program’s Web page. “Without additional support from generous donors, our ability to provide safety net services for impoverished Holocaust survivors in our midst is in peril.”

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The program grew by 40 survivors in 2011, even as need for such assistance outpaced available funding, according to JSSA.

"We have funding that is declining and is finite," program coordinator Ellen Blalock said in a recent article in Washington Jewish Week. "Our caseload is growing with people who are sicker and who are more frail."

The Washington Jewish Week article profiled two of the program’s clients: Iosif and Bella Fikhman, Rockville residents who fled their homes in Russia as the German army approached during World War II.

Click here to read the full story.

For more information, or to donate to JSSA’s Holocaust Survivor Program, click here or on the PDF above.

         JSSA's Holocaust Survivor Program By the Numbers

200,000

Shortfall (in dollars) projected for the program in 2012.

225 Clients served in 2011.
85 Average age of clients. Nearly half are older than 85. Fifteen percent are older than 90.
70 (nearly)
Percent of clients requiring "moderate or full assistance" with daily activities.
40 New clients in 2011.
10 Number of years the program's deficit is projected to grow.
2/3 Proportion of clients with annual incomes below 200 percent of the federal poverty guidelines ($21,660 for individuals; $29,140 for couples).

        Source: Jewish Social Service Agency.


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