DOLLY PARTON WRITES THE FIRST CHECK — GATLINBURG, NOVEMBER 2016. The wildfire that came down out of the Great Smoky Mountains on November 28, 2016 killed fourteen people and burned more than 2,500 buildings in two days. It came within a few miles of the cabin on Locust Ridge where Dolly Parton was born. Dolly was on tour. She called her foundation from the road and asked the same question her father used to ask after bad weather: what do these people need right now, today, before anybody else gets here? The answer she landed on was strange for a charity. Not blankets, not sandwiches, not a fund administered by committee. Cash. A thousand dollars a month, into the hands of every family that lost a home, no application, no income test, no questions about what they spent it on. Nine hundred families. Six months. Then a final check of five thousand dollars before Christmas. She raised nearly twelve million dollars. Researchers at the University of Tennessee studied the program afterward and found something nobody on a board had predicted: people, given money and trusted with it, used it well. She did not show up for a photo op once.
Dolly Parton Writes the First Check: The Gatlinburg Fire and the Gift of Trust In late November 2016, the mountains…