What about the people in other occupations who die at work?

I am curious as to whether this lifelong support actually exists. A few years ago I knew a young lady whose father was shot to death while working as a State Trooper (in the Carolina’s IIRC). She told me that the second worst thing about it was the fact that it basically reduced her family to poverty. I didn’t know her very well, but I have no reason to doubt her.

I’m sure it varies from state to state, but do the families of slain cops and firefighters really get much more than an insurance payout and a nice funeral for their loved one?

I don’t know if that’s necessarily true. Not only that, but one of the reasons they die is because when an accident does happen, the nearest medical help is a long ways away in both distance and time.

Raping the environment? As has already been pointed out, this would be a mighty different world to live in without wood and tree byproducts. Not only that but according to this site:

(bolding mine)

I do know about one family from back east who moved out to Bakersfield after the dad, a cop, was killed. The local police community took her under their wing and helped the family get on their feet. And this was some years after his death. She eventually married another cop.

Does the police or firefighter community gather around the family of a woman police officer killed on the job?