WASHINGTON, D.C. — Catholic parishes throughout the Diocese of Madison will conduct the 21st annual national appeal for the Retirement Fund for Religious the weekend of February 7 and 8.
In 2007, this appeal, which is conducted by the National Religious Retirement Office (NRRO) of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in Washington, distributed $23 million in Basic Grants that benefited 482 of the nation’s Catholic religious institutes of women and men.
Since the first national annual appeal took place in Catholic parishes in 1988, the National Religious Retirement Office has raised more than $550 million. Donations have enabled NRRO to seed and stabilize retirement funds at religious institutes, leverage local fundraising, and assist capital campaigns. Grant awards have assisted investment and supported collaboration among religious institutes and helped ensure quality of life and adequate health care for thousands of women and men religious.
Last year, the Diocese of Madison contributed nearly $117,000 to the Retirement Fund for the Religious, according to the 2007 Annual Report. This year’s appeal will be held February 7 and 8 in parishes around the diocese.
During the past two decades, however, the gap between assets available for retirement and the costs of living and health care for elderly women and men religious has widened from $2 billion to $9 billion and is expected to grow. In 2023, the combined Social Security benefits of all retired religious is projected to be $184 million a year, but cost of care will total more than $1.6 billion annually.
More than 37,000 Catholic religious are now past age 70. More than 4,900 women and men require skilled nursing care. While costs for care in a skilled nursing facility in the U.S. average more than $55,200 annually, religious institutes have kept their average cost of skilled nursing care to $51,361.
The average Social Security benefit for religious women and men is approximately one-third that paid to the average U.S. beneficiary.
“The statistics reflect very real human need,” says NRRO Executive Director Janice Bader, a Sister of the Most Precious Blood from O’Fallon, Mo. “NRRO is in the midst of intense planning for its next 10 years of service. This planning will design expanded partnerships and initiatives with religious institutes for addressing the ongoing challenges of elder care, thus enabling religious institutes to remain viable in their ministries which are so important to the Church.”
Ninety-five percent of donations are awarded to religious institutes through basic grants.