Setting up a Lodge's relief practice from scratch
Use this sequence when a Lodge has let its published relief practice atrophy and needs to rebuild. The work is mostly mechanical; the published practices are well-established, and a Lodge that follows them produces relief reliably.
- Appoint a competent Almoner. Past Master or experienced brother known for discretion and judgment. The Worshipful Master appoints; the appointment is for the year, renewable. The office is not progressive.
- Reconstitute the Charity Committee. Three to five brothers, including the Almoner ex-officio. Pick brothers with practical wisdom, not just goodwill. Meet on a published cadence (monthly) so timeliness is built into the structure.
- Separate the Lodge Relief Fund from other accounts. Open a separate ledger line (or a separate bank account if the Lodge is large enough). Audit annually as part of the year-end work. Publish the balance to the Lodge.
- Establish the Almoner's discretionary authority. The published practice: he can authorize relief up to a stated small amount on his own (typically $200-$500 depending on Lodge size) without waiting for the Committee to meet. Larger needs go to the Committee within a stated period (typically 7 days).
- Establish the reporting cadence. Almoner reports briefly at each stated meeting (aggregate only, no names). Charity Committee reports annually to the Lodge. The Lodge reports annually to the Grand Lodge on the published forms.
Responding to a disaster — the MSANA coordination
Use this sequence when a disaster (fire, flood, hurricane, mass illness) affects multiple brothers or the surrounding community at scale. The published practice integrates the Lodge, the Grand Lodge, MSANA, and the appendant charities.
- Immediate local triage. The Almoner and Charity Committee identify which brothers and families are affected, what's needed in the first 72 hours, and what the Lodge can supply from its standing fund.
- Notify the Grand Lodge. The Grand Master is the published channel to MSANA's Disaster Relief Fund; the Lodge does not contact MSANA directly. The Grand Lodge assesses the scope, coordinates with neighboring Lodges, and (if conditions warrant) requests MSANA disbursement.
- Coordinate with the appendant charities where their specialized work applies. Shriners Hospitals for pediatric burn care; the Shrine Transportation Fund for getting affected children to care; KTEF or KTEdF for ongoing educational needs if a family's bread-winner is permanently affected. The Almoner is the routing point.
- Document everything. The disaster-relief lifecycle generates more record-keeping than ordinary cases; the Grand Lodge and MSANA require structured reporting for accountability. The Almoner files contemporaneous notes; the Charity Committee compiles.
- Plan the long arc. Disasters produce long tails. Six months out, the urgent help is done; the brother whose home burned still has insurance fights, rebuilding decisions, and exhaustion. The Lodge's walking-alongside (chapter 48) extends past the first weeks; that's where most disaster-relief efforts quietly fail.