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National D-Day Memorial reduces million-dollar debts
by Heather
B. Hayes
for Virginia Business
May 2006
When
the National D-Day Memorial was unveiled in Bedford on June 2001, the euphoria
was short-lived. Within a few months, officials announced that the nonprofit
foundation running the memorial had accumulated nearly $6 million in debt.
The organization eventually had to endure the fraud and perjury trial of
its first president, Richard Burrow, file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and work
out repayment schedules with creditors. (Charges against Burrow were dropped
after two trials ended in hung juries.)
Not quite five years later, the foundation, under the direction of new President
William McIntosh, has nearly wiped out its debt load, paying off $5 million and
owing a total of just $564,000.
What have been the keys to achieving
this feat? Many of the same virtues associated with D-Day
itself: volunteerism, selflessness, team work and a very
clear goal. “We’ve
had tremendous broad-based support from civic organizations, veterans organizations
and the community as a whole,” says Liz Bryant, a spokeswoman for the D-Day
Memorial Foundation. The organization’s willingness to make the public
aware of the debt, she notes, was critical. “People are just really excited
to be part of the effort.
“We get everyone from large corporate donors to veterans who send in checks
that they really can’t afford to school groups who have been very enthusiastic
and creative in their fund-raising efforts.”
Last fall, a major construction loan came due and with it the threat of a $400,000
assessment penalty, but the foundation was able to avoid the penalty by obtaining
a loan from the Bank of the James. The debt restructuring not only provided more
favorable repayment terms, but also lifted restrictions on new spending outside
of operations and education.
On Memorial Day, a bronze sculpture of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower
(who as a general was commander of the D-Day invasion) will be available for
public viewing. It will be housed inside a concrete gazebo-like structure in
the English Garden. The new items, funded with a grant from a private foundation
in Richmond and matching funds from the D-Day Memorial Foundation, will be the
first significant construction at the site since the memorial was dedicated in
2001.
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