Disaster Update: Tropical Depression Hermine in Texas

September 9, 2010

Disaster Update

Texas – The remnants of Tropical Depression Hermine reportedly spawned a number of tornadoes in and around Dallas that affected businesses, industrial areas, damaged an apartment complex and several homes yesterday.

The Dallas Area chapter deployed a Disaster Action Team (DAT), to assess the need of the affected residents. They will begin detailed Disaster Assessment this morning.

Shelters Open:
Rush Creek Christian Church, 2401 SW Green Oaks Blvd, Arlington Kidd Springs Recreation Center, 711 W Canty St., Dallas

Last night, seven people spent the night at the Rush Creek shelter. No families spent the night at Kidd Springs.

Damage Assessment:
Teams of Red Cross Damage Assessment workers will gather at the Dallas Area Chapter, 4800 Harry Hines Blvd, at 8:00a.m. this morning. These teams will receive maps of affected neighborhoods to survey for residential damage. They will depart from the Dallas Area Chapter and head to key target zones:

Seagoville, Irving, Grand Prairie, Dallas and Arlington

An update on services that will be provided to Arlington flood victims will be provided later this morning.


Disaster Update: Tropical Depression Hermine in Texas

September 8, 2010

Disaster Update

This message from Anita Foster, PIO, American Red Cross:

As Tropical Depression Hermine passes over North Texas, the Red Cross is organizing efforts to determine where help is most needed. Right now, Red Cross workers are in conversations with city officials throughout Collin, Dallas, Ellis, Johnson, Navarro and Tarrant Counties to determine if evacuation sites need to be established. If so, Red Cross teams will deploy and provide assistance.

Damage Assessment teams are also ready to go as soon as it’s safe. If there is damage to residential structures because of Hermine, families will receive help from the Red Cross.

Due to high water threatening homes in the Grand Prairie area, the Red Cross will be opening a shelter at:

Bowles Life Center
2750 Graham Street
Grand Prairie, TX

The shelter will be operational at approximately 2:30pm.

Update (2PM EDT): A new Red Cross shelter is being opened at Rush Creek Christian Church at 2401 SW Green Oaks Blvd. in Arlington.


Story: Amateur Radio Operators Provide Vital Communications Links Between Red Cross Shelters During Hurricane Earl

September 7, 2010

This post is written by American Red Cross disaster volunteer Allen Crabtree.

Friday, September 3. 2010 – HYANNIS, MA – “K1PBO, this is W2BTA with the shelter status report from the Nantucket shelter.”

2010 Hurricane Earl
ARES member Tom Wruk (KB1QCQ) in the Cape Cod Chapter communications center receives a status report from one of the regional evacuation shelters on Cape Cod during Hurricane Earl.

Amateur Radio Technician Wini Lord Meservey was on duty at the communications room crowded with radios and computers in the basement of the American Red Cross Cape Cod Chapter in Hyannis, MA. She returned the radio call from the amateur radio operator located at the Red Cross shelters on Nantucket Island, one of many regional shelters opened in response to Hurricane Earl.

“W2BTA, this is K1PBO. I copy you,” Meservey replied. “Go ahead with your shelter report.”

One by one, each of the stations at the Red Cross shelters checked in with the count of residents and tourists who had sought shelter from Hurricane Earl. This information, along with current weather and reports of flooding, was gathered and then passed along to the Red Cross as well as the Emergency Operations Center and the nearby military base.

“Amateur radio provides communications to support the disaster relief efforts of the American Red Cross,” said Frank O’Laughlin (WQ1O). “When all other forms of communications go out, we are still on the air to keep vital emergency links open. This is particularly important here at the Cape. We are vulnerable here on our peninsula and on Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard to storms and power outages.”

O’Laughlin is the Director of the local Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES – pronounced A-Rees) and is a veteran ham radio operator and trained Red Cross volunteer with twenty years’ experience. ARES is a program of the Amateur Radio Relay League (ARRL) that provides point to point communications between shelters, assists in recovery efforts, provides weather reports in weather disasters and sends messages where normal communications have failed or are overloaded.

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Story: Cape Cod residents find shelter from Hurricane Earl

September 7, 2010

This post is written by American Red Cross disaster volunteer Allen Crabtree.

2010 Hurricane Earl
Bo Lawrence and his wife Shirley were safe and warm and sheltered from Hurricane Earl at the American Red Cross shelter in South Yarmouth, Cape Cod. They are shown here with Red Cross volunteer Allen Crabtree.

With Hurricane Earl threatening Cape Cod and the islands as a Category 3 hurricane on Friday, the American Red Cross opened several shelters there as safe places of shelter from the storm. The storm’s track was predicted to bring it very close to Nantucket. Remembering the havoc that past hurricanes have wrought to the area Nantucket residents and those on the Cape and Martha’s Vineyard were cautioned to be ready for the worst.

Beaches and boat landings were closed, ferry service to the islands suspended, and campers and beach goers asked to leave for higher ground. Businesses and residents boarded up their windows and boats returned to harbor and tied down. The Red Cross positioned cots, blankets, food and water at six regional shelters and trained Red Cross shelter workers mobilized to care for the nearly one hundred residents and tourists who took refuge there from the storm.

Two who took refuge from the storm were Bo and Shirley Lawrence from West Yarmouth, Cape Cod. With Hurricane Earl moving up the coast they were evacuated to the American Red Cross shelter set up at the Dennis Yarmouth High School in South Yarmouth.

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Tropical Storm Hermine

September 7, 2010

Hermine made landfall on Monday and is expected to affect the southern portion of the state with high winds and rain up to 12 inches in areas throughout Texas.  A Hurricane Watch and a Tropical Storm Warning is in effect. The storm is projected to move through the center of the state.

>> Hurricane Fast Facts


Press Release: Red Cross Provides Comfort and Shelter from the Storm as Hurricane Earl Moves Up the Atlantic Coast

September 4, 2010

WASHINGTON, September 4, 2010 – The American Red Cross has provided help and shelter from North Carolina to New England as Hurricane Earl and its winds and rain moved up the Atlantic Coast.

Friday night, twelve Red Cross shelters in New York, Massachusetts and Rhode Island gave nearly 100 people a safe place to ride out the storm as Earl moved past Cape Cod with strong winds and heavy rain. Thursday night, a dozen Red Cross shelters in North Carolina gave more than 260 people comfort as the storm passed through that area.

The Red Cross deployed 500 trained disaster workers and 62 emergency response vehicles to North Carolina, New York, Massachusetts and Rhode Island to be ready for Hurricane Earl, and had additional vehicles, staff and supplies on standby.

“The Red Cross provided shelter and comfort to people as Hurricane Earl moved up the coast,” said Joe Becker, senior vice president, Red Cross Disaster Services. “Just as we ask each of you to be ready for disasters, the Red Cross practices preparedness by having trained workers and supplies in position before hurricanes come ashore so we can be ready to help as soon as the danger passes. This time much of the East Coast was spared a direct hit by a powerful hurricane, but we’re going to take the steps necessary to be ready when severe weather threatens.”

According to area officials, Earl weakened to a tropical storm and had little impact on Cape Cod and the surrounding areas, causing no major damage and few power outages. The storm is now headed towards Canada, and is expected to weaken further.

The Red Cross worked closely with various state, county and local government officials along the Atlantic coast on emergency planning for the storm in states such as North Carolina, South Carolina, New York, Massachusetts, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine.

While it has moved away, Earl is expected to continue to cause powerful rip currents that are likely to be seen along the Atlantic Coast throughout the Labor Day weekend. The Red Cross advises anyone visiting the shore areas to swim only on lifeguard protected beaches and within designated swimming areas.

To make a financial donation to the Red Cross to help people affected by this storm and other disasters here in the United States and around the world, people can click, call or text – visit www.redcross.org, call 1-800-RED CROSS, or text the word REDCROSS to 90999 to make a $10 donation. The storm may also impact blood collections in the affected areas. To find out how you can be a blood donor, visit www.redcrossblood.org.

About the American Red Cross:

The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies nearly half of the nation’s blood; teaches lifesaving skills; provides international humanitarian aid; and supports military members and their families. The Red Cross is a charitable organization — not a government agency — and depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to perform its mission. For more information, please visit www.redcross.org or join our blog at http://blog.redcross.org.




Photos: Hurricane Earl on Cape Cod

September 4, 2010

Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Cape Cod Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Cape Cod Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Cape Cod

Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Cape Cod

Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Cape Cod Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Cape Cod

Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Cape Cod Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Cape Cod Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Cape Cod

All photos from Hurricane Earl


Video: Hurricane Earl from Chatham, MA

September 4, 2010

Governor David Paterson Visits Long Island Red Cross Operation

September 4, 2010

Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010

YAPHANK, N.Y., Sept. 3, 2010 – Governor David A. Paterson thanked American Red Cross volunteers Friday afternoon for their efforts to prepare Long Island for Hurricane Earl’s approach. At a press conference in the agency’s operations center, Paterson praised them,

“Not just for their response to this disaster but for all the months of work and training and preparedness that make it easy.”

The response on Long Island is being led by Robert Imbornoni, the chief response officer for the Metropolitan New York Chapters. Imbornoni credited the success of the effort to years of hard work and coordination between the local chapters. The disaster relief operation headquarters was established adjacent to the Suffolk County Chapter’s offices. Volunteers from throughout the region—Suffolk, Nassau County, and Greater New York—are leading the response with some volunteers coming from as far as Chicago.

And though most of Long Island seems to have dodged a bullet thanks to Earl shifting east, the Red Cross remains on the job. A shelter is open in Montauk, a small village located on the easternmost point of the island that is being pounded by heavy surf and rain. Coastal flooding remains a concern across the island as the storm passes.

“We will be here as long as we are needed,” stated Imbornoni.

Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010
Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010 Hurricane Earl 9.3.2010


Story: The American Red Cross Has a Place for All Skill Sets on its Volunteer Team

September 3, 2010

This story was written by Red Cross volunteer Mary Jean Baxley.

2010 Hurricane Earl
Keith Savage, Red Cross volunteer with the Cape Fear Chapter, discusses technology issues with Louise Hornor, volunteer with the Elkhart County, IN Red Cross chapter.

“The American Red Cross truly is a place for everybody’s skill sets. We thought it was sheltering and feeding at disasters. Whether you are a taxi driver, CEO, nurse, computer technician or whatever, the Red Cross has a place waiting for every type skill,” said Louise Hornor, American Red Cross volunteer.

Louise and her husband Sean Welsh are a growing number of Disaster Operations Volunteer Escapees (DOVES) who travel as a couple in their recreational vehicle to help in times of disaster. They are both computer experts who are retired. They now lend their expertise to the American Red Cross.

They spent twelve weeks living in their RV in Baton Rouge La. after hurricane Katrina. And later went back for several weeks to help. They have now been to fourteen disasters in five years. Their home chapter in Elkhart, Indiana (Elkhart County Red Cross) will deploy them wherever they are needed. Elkhart is the RV capital of the world.

Five years ago, they were members of an organization called Escapees. They are people who live and travel in their RV’s. They also have many members who have learned about the DOVES through meetings. The Escapees have American Red Cross basic training courses at their rallies and new members learn about the opportunities available.

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