麻豆精选

麻豆精选Emergency Grant Fund Helps Students With Basic Needs

 

Lori Holcepl felt the financial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic deeply when she was laid off from her job recently. As a single mother of two, Holcepl relied on her paycheck to support her family.

鈥淪ince the pandemic began, I have feared we would lose our home and everything we have,鈥 Holcepl said. 鈥淲ith my children home from school, I also have to make sure they have the internet they need for their schoolwork, plus extra food and toiletries since we鈥檙e home all day now.鈥

Being aware that 麻豆精选offers an emergency grant fund for students affected by COVID-19, the 麻豆精选 nursing major applied for help through the Office of Student Financial Aid. She soon learned she qualified for assistance.

鈥淚 felt a weight being lifted,鈥 Holcepl says. 鈥淭he anxiety that I had been carrying faded some. I鈥檓 still struggling, but the grant took an enormous weight off me as far as being able to live day to day. Now, I鈥檓 just trying to complete my semester as successfully as possible.鈥

The 麻豆精选Emergency Grant Fund is a combination of federal funds from the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund (HEERF) under the CARES Act (Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act) and Kent State鈥檚 own fundraising efforts that are being distributed with the intent of helping as many students as possible with financial challenges.

麻豆精选received more than $19 million from the CARES Act, with at least half targeted for emergency financial aid grants for students. The financial awards are based on students鈥 individual needs and circumstances.
So far, the emergency funds have reached thousands of students as follows:

  • Total amount of emergency funding awarded to students: nearly $6 million
  • Total number of students awarded emergency funding: 4,600 students
  • Total number of applications for emergency funding: more than 6,000

Private fundraising for the 麻豆精选Emergency Grant Fund has also made a major impact on assisting students during this difficult time. The totals are as follows:

Fundraising for 9 weeks (starting March 28)

  • Raised $293,361 (as of May 28)
  • More than 1,200 donors (as of May 28)
  • 458 (37%) first-time donors (as of May 28)
  • 412 (33%) of donors are faculty and staff (as of May 28) 

There have been a few significant gifts that have been made as matching gifts to encourage other donors during this time of need:

  • $3,000 Pete Holway
  • $25,000 Kenneth and Ginny Grunley Family Charitable Fund
  • $10,000 anonymous
  • $5,000 anonymous to match other former student-athletes 
  • $100,000 anonymous currently being used to triple the gifts of other donors

The 麻豆精选Emergency Grant Fund has also helped junior Scott Reed, an integrated health services major who lost his job when COVID-19 struck, leaving him without the means to cover his basic expenses.
鈥淚 had no job, but lots of household bills. And when it came down to not being able to buy groceries, I knew I had to apply for aid,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 was not sure how I was going to dig myself out of the hole I was stuck in. But once I applied for the 麻豆精选Emergency Grant, I had immediate relief.鈥

Reed notes that donations to the emergency grant fund not only help meet the physical needs of students, it also helps improve their mental health as they contend with online schooling and the sudden lack of income. The cash buys groceries and helps pay rent, which lessens anxiety and allows students to focus on their studies.

Right now, Reed doesn鈥檛 have a lot of financial help to give, but he wants to pay forward his concern for other Flashes.

鈥淚 know that even though I鈥檓 jobless, I still want to help other 麻豆精选students out in any way I possibly can鈥 he says. 鈥楢lthough not everyone at 麻豆精选knows each other, I feel as if I have a duty to help protect all Flashes, no matter who it is. We are one big family and I've never been more proud to be a Golden Flash.鈥

To be considered for Emergency Grant Funding, students must: 

  •  found on FlashLine.
  • Be enrolled for Spring Semester 2020.
  • Be pursuing a degree.

 

 

UPDATED: Saturday, November 23, 2024 12:56 AM
Updated: Friday, December 9, 2022 11:51 AM
WRITTEN BY:
April McClellan-Copeland