Medal for WWII Homefront Volunteers

Full Title:
North Platte Canteen Congressional Gold Medal Act

Summary#

This bill would award a Congressional Gold Medal, collectively, to the people and communities who volunteered or donated items to the North Platte Canteen in North Platte, Nebraska, during World War II (December 25, 1941 to April 1, 1946). The medal would be struck by the U.S. Mint and then given to the Lincoln County Historical Museum for display and research. The bill also allows the Mint to strike and sell bronze duplicates to cover production costs and directs Mint funds and sales proceeds to the Mint’s operating fund.

  • Main change: Congress authorizes and directs the creation and presentation of a Congressional Gold Medal honoring North Platte Canteen volunteers and donors from the stated WWII period.
  • The Secretary of the Treasury (acting through the U.S. Mint) will design, strike, and produce the medal.
  • The gold medal will be given to the Lincoln County Historical Museum in North Platte for display and research.
  • The Mint may make and sell bronze duplicates at prices that cover costs.
  • Costs for producing the medals may be charged to the United States Mint Public Enterprise Fund; sales proceeds go back into that fund.
  • Medals struck under the bill are designated national medals and treated as numismatic items under federal law.

What it means for you#

  • Former volunteers, donors, and their families: The bill recognizes their service and donations during WWII. The award is collective (for the group), and the physical gold medal will be placed in the Lincoln County Historical Museum. The bill does not specify that individual people will receive personal gold medals.
  • Lincoln County Historical Museum (North Platte): The museum will receive the gold medal and is expected to display it and make it available for research. The museum may have costs for receiving, displaying, insuring, or conserving the medal.
  • United States Mint: The Mint will design and strike the gold medal and may produce bronze duplicates for sale. The Mint bears production responsibilities and uses its Public Enterprise Fund to pay costs.
  • General public and historians: The medal in the museum will serve as an official recognition and may be available for public viewing and research.
  • Taxpayers: The bill directs the Mint to use its operating fund to pay costs and to accept sales revenues back into that fund. The bill does not provide a dollar estimate of costs or say whether there is any charge to the Treasury’s general fund.

Expenses#

No publicly available information provides a total cost estimate for making and presenting the medal.

  • The bill authorizes the Mint to charge the United States Mint Public Enterprise Fund for the costs of striking the medals. This is the Mint’s operating fund, not the general Treasury account.
  • The Mint may sell bronze duplicates at prices meant to cover labor, materials, dies, machinery use, and overhead. Proceeds from those sales are deposited back into the Mint’s fund.
  • The bill does not include a fiscal note, dollar estimates, or specific staffing or transportation costs.
  • The Lincoln County Historical Museum may face modest costs for display, security, insurance, or conservation; the bill does not provide funding for those costs.

Proponents' View#

  • The bill appears intended to honor the large volunteer effort at the North Platte Canteen and to recognize home-front contributions during World War II.
  • Supporters may argue that the medal formally acknowledges the service of about 55,000 volunteers from many communities who provided hospitality to millions of troops, as described in the bill’s findings.
  • Placing the medal in the local historical museum would preserve the recognition where the event occurred and make it available for public viewing and research.
  • Selling bronze duplicates to cover costs keeps the production financially neutral for the Mint’s operating fund.

Opponents' View#

  • One concern is that the bill does not estimate costs, so it is unclear how much the Mint’s fund will be used or for how long.
  • The medal is a collective award, and the bill does not explain whether or how individual volunteers or their descendants will receive a physical token. That may disappoint people who expect personal recognition.
  • The process for design, presentation, and any distribution of replicas is not described in detail. This leaves questions about timing and how communities or families will be involved.
  • The bill sets a precedent for awarding national medals for historical local efforts; some may question how Congress will decide which local or historical acts deserve similar recognition in the future.
  • The museum may incur display and insurance costs that are not funded by the bill.