(The Daily) They didn’t call him the Great Communicator for nothing. In response to a 
deadpan request for federal cleanup funds from a California middle-schooler — 
whose mother had just declared his room a “disaster area” — President Ronald 
Reagan calmly (and with his tongue firmly in his cheek) counseled self-reliance 
in the letter reproduced here (via Letters 
of Note).
Andy Smith
Irmo, South Carolina
May 11, 
1984
Dear Andy:
I’m sorry to be so late in answering your letter 
but as you know I’ve been in China and found your letter here upon my 
return.
Your application for disaster relief has been duly noted but I 
must point out one technical problem: the authority declaring the disaster is 
supposed to make the request. In this case your mother.
However setting 
that aside I’ll have to point out the larger problem of available funds. This 
has been a year of disasters, 539 hurricanes as of May 4th and several more 
since, numerous floods, forest fires, drought in Texas and a number of 
earthquakes. What I’m getting at is that funds are dangerously low.
May I 
make a suggestion? This administration, believing that government has done many 
things that could better be done by volunteers at the local level, has sponsored 
a Private Sector Initiative program, calling upon people to practice voluntarism 
in the solving of a number of local problems.
Your situation appears to 
be a natural. I’m sure your mother was fully justified in proclaiming your room 
a disaster. Therefore you are in an excellent position to launch another 
volunteer program to go along with the more than 3,000 already underway in our 
nation—congratulations.
Give my best regards to your 
mother.
Sincerely,
Ronald Reagan
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