Story: They help everybody when they need it

March 7, 2012

This story is written by Red Cross volunteer Gerry Holmes.

Indiana Tornadoes 2012

Beverly was at work but Lloyd was home alone with their pet Chihuahua when the sirens went off. He put a chair in the closet, put the dog on his lap and covered up with a blanket and prepared for the worst. As the giant tornado was wreaking havoc all around him, Lloyd, prepared to die as he felt the house begin to lift off the ground. Just then, a giant oak tree behind the house split and dropped on top of the house, pinning it there and preventing it from going anywhere. “Apparently the Lord had other plans for Lloyd,” Beverly says.

They relayed their story after receiving food, work gloves and blankets from the American Red Cross food truck that was cruising the areas affected by the storm. “The Red Cross is so helpful and we appreciateeverything they do” Beverly said. “My brother is a tool and die maker, a smart man,” Beverly says. “He says the Red Cross is the only charity he’ll contribute to because they give back so much. They help everybody when they need it.”


Story: West Liberty Relying on Red Cross After Tornado

March 6, 2012

This story is written by Lynette Nyman, a Red Cross worker in Kentucky.

Tornado, West Liberty, Kentucky
Chianna, Stacy, Daniel, and baby Daniel at the Red Cross shelter in West Liberty, Kentucky.

For some, the Red Cross shelter in West Liberty, Kentucky, is the only home they have. “Without the Red Cross,” says Stacy LeMaster, 26, “we would be on the street.”

Since the March 2 tornado hugged the ground, wiping out dozens of homes and businesses in West Liberty, Stacy, her husband, and their three children have sought refuge at the shelter where everybody knows everybody. “This is just like home,” says Daniel.

Disaster relief workers from around the region are providing essential services to more than 50 people seeking refuge in the shelter. The shelter is also an assistance station for dozens more staying with family and friends, but who are otherwise homeless.

Shelter operations manager Brad Powell says Red Cross relief teams are also in the community. “We have relief workers doing damage assessment and mass feeding,” says Powell.

Some of the relief workers at the shelter have had little sleep, including Breck Hensley, 16, who has friends affected by the tornado. He says being a Red Cross volunteer is a good experience. “I’m just trying to help all those people who need it because if I were them, I would want it,” says Hensley.

People in West Liberty are likely to rely on the Red Cross shelter for many more days as the slow process of tornado recovery takes its turn.


Story: The Red Cross is Always There

March 5, 2012

This story is written by Vicki Eichstaedt, a Red Cross volunteer in Henryville, IN.

Henryville, IN Tornadoes 2012
Lloyd and Beverly Evans talk to Red Cross worker Vicki Eichstaedt.

It is hard to imagine owing your life to a falling and splintering oak tree being driven into your home. But that is exactly what happened to Lloyd and Beverly Evans of Henryville, IN. Lloyd had no time to escape to a safer location when he heard and felt the tornado bearing down on Henryville on Friday, March 2. “The lights started flickering and it sounded like a train, but there are no tracks over here.” Lloyd said.

Knowing he had very little time and no good options, he grabbed his beloved Chihuahua and hunkered down in an internal closet. With a blanket covering his head and shoulders Lloyd waited. As the roaring grew and his ears began to pop, Lloyd felt the house start to lift. In as much time as he had to think of the unthinkable, Lloyd heard the sounds of a tree falling, right into his house only a few feet away. The weight of the old oak tree stopped the house from being sucked into the tornado.

“That old oak may have saved my life,” Lloyd marveled, the house just quit moving. I can hardly believe what Mother Nature can do. We lost everything in the ’92 floods and came back. The Red Cross was here for us then and I think they help a whole lot of people.” Lloyd’s wife Beverly added, “The Red Cross is always there when these things happen…they are always there.” Lloyd shook his head, “Now we have survived the worst thing I’ve seen in my 70 years. I am a lucky man.”


Story: Red Cross Response in North Carolina

March 3, 2012

North Carolina Tornadoes
Harrisburg, NC resident Deborah Sanders talks with Red Crosser Nancy Litton in front of the Sanders’ home, which was hit by a tornado early Saturday morning.

Deborah Sanders, from Harrisburg, NC, said she and her husband didn’t have much time to get to safety when they heard the tornado approaching their home.

She and her 14-year-old daughter sought cover, “But my husband didn’t even have time to do that. He ended up just standing in the hallway as it went over our house.”

When the weather had passed, the Sanders family walked outside to assess what had happened, and found that half their home was completely destroyed.

“But we’re OK,” Deborah said. “Us, our daughter and our two dogs are all unhurt, that’s the important thing.”

The Red Cross is providing food, drinks and clean-up supplies to the Sanders family and other residents in North Carolina who have been affected by the storms this morning.

“We’re so thankful to have the support of you guys, and we’re so thankful we’re all OK.”


Story: Family glad to be “safe” after tornado

March 3, 2012

This story is written by Kate Meier, a Red Cross worker in North Carolina.

Charlotte, NC Tornado
Joeli, 4, and Talia Klopfenstein, 15, snuggle under a Red Cross blanket at the Red Cross shelter in Charlotte.

The Klopfenstein family was sleeping in their home comfortably when howling winds woke them.

Parents Joel and Erin gathered their five children just as the windows in their east Charlotte home.

“It was loud,” said 8-year-old Zoe.

The family was evacuated from their home and came to the American Red Cross shelter, where they snuggled under blankets. Zoe enjoyed a chocolate donut as her younger sister Joeli smiled at the Red Cross volunteer and held up four fingers to tell her age.

“I’m glad you guys are here and safe,” said Red Crosser Kate Meier. “We are too,” said Erin.


Story: Alabama Tornadoes Partnerships

January 27, 2012

This story is written by American Red Cross worker Dave Schrader, who is currently in Alabama to help with the Red Cross relief efforts.

Alabama Tornadoes (Jan 2012)
NAACP disaster liaison Steve Branch meets with Red Cross volunteer John Manners of Tennessee at the American Red Cross Alabama tornado Disaster Operations Center to map out a plan to help people in tornado ravaged areas outside Birmingham, AL.

It’s 10 a.m. on Thursday, January 26th , just days after tornadoes tore through neighborhoods and communities surrounding Birmingham, Alabama and there’s nothing else Steve Branch wants to be doing than helping the American Red Cross help those in need. Branch, unfortunately, has seen his share of disasters, most recently as the head of the NAACP’s disaster response following the Tuscaloosa tornado less than a year earlier. Branch is helping again this year as part of a partnership the NAACP has with the American Red Cross, a partnership Branch values a great deal.

“The NAACP and the Red Cross serve as a bridge,” Branch says. “They are a bridge to bring people together to help each other.”

Branch says within 24 hours dozens of NAACP members from around Alabama will descend on Birmingham. Then in conjunction with the Red Cross, they will handle administrative and field work, including fanning out to the hardest hit areas to meet face to face with residents. Branch says the volunteers will be organized by expertise and then assigned to help where the needs are greatest.

“First and foremost, we are here to help,” Branch says. “But we also want to enlighten and educate residents about the kind of assistance the Red Cross provides and how to get it.”

The partnership the American Red Cross has with the NAACP is just one of many partnerships the Red Cross worked out long ago and is being put to good use here in Alabama.

The American Red Cross’ longstanding partnership with the Southern Baptist Convention is once again helping serve hundreds of meals to people who don’t have power or the means to cook their own meals.

The American Red Cross buys the food, the Southern Baptists then cook it up in a makeshift kitchen outside one of three shelters set up here, and then Red Cross volunteers load up the food in Emergency Response Vehicles and literally hand delivers it to people at their homes or in their neighborhoods.

Just like the American Red Cross cannot do what it does without the generous support of donations from the public, it also cannot do what it does without the many partnerships it has formed over the years. The American Red Cross is continually forming new relationships, like the one it has with Steve Branch and the NAACP, so it can continue to respond to disasters quickly, effectively, and efficiently.


Story: A True Community Response

September 26, 2011

This story is written by Red Cross worker Trista Jensen Cunningham.

Pennsylvania Flooding

“Don’t ever tell this little valley of fifteen thousand people they can’t do anything,” shared Bob Blauvelt, assistant chief for the Athens Township Volunteer Fire Company. The valley he’s referring to is an area along the Pennsylvania/New York border that includes the towns of Sayre, Athens, Waverly and South Waverly. Bordered by the Susquehanna and Chemung Rivers, the valley was hit particularly hard by Tropical Storm Lee in early September.

A lifelong resident of Athens Township, Blauvelt recalled the floods of both 1972 and 2006, noting how much faster the waters came this time around. Within just a few hours of the flood waters inundating the town, more than a hundred residents were left without a home. The members of the Athens Township Volunteer Fire Company quickly opened their doors to set up a shelter for their neighbors and friends, while the local American Red Cross mobilized materials and volunteers.

For weeks, whatever need was expressed, community members stepped up and made sure their own were taken care of. Spontaneous volunteers set up a distribution center at the station, collecting and distributing cleaning supplies, shovels, boots, blankets and food. Churches, community groups, businesses small and large – everyone came together to fight this disaster. “If you try to think of just one person to thank, you can’t. Even people who don’t live here anymore, or who have family and friends here, have been mailing in supplies and donations to help,” shared Blauvelt.

Judy Coleman, the Red Cross emergency services director for Bradford County recognized the amazing response of this community. “If there wasn’t a sense of community in this area, this disaster would’ve been much worse,” she shared. “The flexibility and generosity of the fire company, the volunteers, and the residents has been outstanding.”


Story: Red Cross Volunteer Takes the “Dis” Out of Disability

September 23, 2011

James Goodman Unloading Wheelchair  Hazleton PA 092211  Photo Bruce Newton  Release on File

By Bruce Newton and Judy sperling-Newton

James Goodman has been a Red Cross Volunteer in the Murfreesboro Chapter since 2007. A disabled veteran, injured in Desert Storm in 1991, James, who can stand for very brief periods of time, but uses a specialized wheelchair to get around, does not let his disabilities limit his ability to contribute to the wellbeing of others.

James was deployed by his chapter to assist the victims of the recent Pennsylvania floods by working as a member of a three-person team driving and dispensing food from a Red Cross emergency response vehicle. James uses custom-made ramps to get his wheelchair into and out of the vehicle, and he performs all the functions necessary to provide service to the clients. James rises an hour early each day to have time to soak in a bath of hot water to make sure his body is ready for the 12 to 14 hour days he puts in to serve the people in need.

At the local level, James worked as a shelter manager in the aftermath of Hurricane Gustav in Nashville in 2008, and he has also provided disaster assessment services when needed. On a daily basis, James is considered critical to the operation of his chapter. He is the Disaster Action Captain Monday through Friday from 8am to 5pm and one week each month from 5pm to 8 am every evening and all day on weekends and holidays. In this role, he leads a team of volunteers who respond at any time of the day or night to assist victims of local disasters, mostly single family home fires. He and his team members provide financial assistance to help replace food, clothing, and shoes lost in the fire and assist fire victims with short-term lodging. They also make referrals to Red Cross nurses and mental health professionals when appropriate and to partner agencies in the community.

James assists the families of service members as the chapter caseworker for the Services to Armed Forces Committee which covers eight counties. James is also an instructor, teaching classes in disaster relief for Red Cross volunteers. He says that “being able to volunteer with the Red Cross gives me a real sense of purpose.”

When asked about how he has been treated by the Red Cross, James says, “Everyone has been open and accepting; they have offered every applicable accommodation to support me as a volunteer.” He was encouraged to take the courses necessary to obtain his emergency response vehicle certification, and he is permitted to pull his wheelchair on a trailer behind the vehicle when he goes out on calls.

James has been at work in Pennsylvania since September 11. Jim Kuhlmann, a retired physician who is a Mass Care Feeding Manager, says of James, “He is a great addition to our team. He is enthusiastic, upbeat, and completes all tasks without supervision. James always offers to do more than is required.”

Brian Toll, the Emergency Services Director at the Murfreesboro Chapter, considers James to be “indispensable.” He is the most active volunteer they have. Brian says, “If something needs to be done, you give it to James, and he takes care of it. I don’t want to think about what we would do if he stopped showing up; he keeps us looking forward, working to make things better. James is well respected, not only at the chapter, but in the region. He is a humble guy, but his work speaks volumes.” Brian calls James a “workhorse.” He goes onto say, “I know there are some who have perceptions about people with disabilities, but there is nothing James can’t do. Anyone with disabilities who would like to volunteer in our chapter is very welcome.”

So what advice does James give to people with disabilities? He says, “Don’t hesitate. Go to your local or regional chapter and volunteer. Regardless of your disability, there is a job you can do at the American Red Cross.” And with James as an example, who could say this isn’t true?


Story: Red Cross Shelters Residents of Flooded Transvale Acres in Conway, New Hampshire

September 15, 2011

This story is written by Red Cross worker Allen Crabtree.

Hurricane Irene: New Hampshire Relief
Red Cross shelter worker Jon Pettit listens to Chuck Chittenden tell how he had to be rescued when Tropical Storm Irene flooding caused the Saco River to overflow, inundating homes and blocking roads.

“When the Saco River overflowed its banks during Tropical Storm Irene it flooded the Transvale Acres neighborhood,” said Cheryl Johnston, Red Cross shelter manager in Conway, NH. “The water came up very fast, over five feet, and many residents were trapped in their homes.”

Conway Fire Department Chief Steve Solomon said that his department evacuated twenty-two people by rescue boat from the neighborhood on Sunday night, August 28, 2011.

One of those evacuated was Chuck Chittenden who lived in a trailer at 234 Transvale Road. He normally works the night shift at nearby Cumberland Farms, but had the night off Sunday.

“I was catching up on my sleep when my landlord started hammering on my door to wake me up and hollered to ‘get out – the river is flooding!’” he said. “I walked out on my deck and it was bobbing up and down like it was a raft, and when I stepped off I was in water up to my waist. Luckily the fire department rescue boat came along and saved me.” He said that flood waters picked up his trailer and smashed it against a tree. “I’ve lived there three years, and have no insurance. I don’t know what I am going to do,” he said.

The Fire Department paramedics examined his badly bruised ankle that Chittenden had injured when he fell off his porch, and then transported him to the hospital. From there he was released and came to the Red Cross shelter that was opened at the Conway Recreation Center in Center Conway.

Read More >>


Story: Down the Road with ERV 1099

September 14, 2011

This story is written by Red Cross volunteer Allen Crabtree.

Hurricane Irene: Vermont Relief

“We’ve been assigned to the area southeast of Rutland, around Shrewsbury and East Wallingford,” said Richard Mah to his partner Dan Harrell. He continued, “We’re to load up ERV 1099 with cleaning supplies, water and snacks to bring around to the neighborhoods where people are starting to clean up after the floods.” Mah and Harrell are American Red Cross volunteers from Indiana who have been deployed to Rutland, Vermont to assist in the disaster relief effort underway following Tropical Storm Irene’s passage through the state. They have been driving a Red Cross Emergency Response Vehicle (ERV) through the storm-impacted areas delivering food, cleanup supplies, and comforting words to residents.

Today they are assigned ERV number 1099, a vehicle deployed from the Vermont and New Hampshire Valley Red Cross Chapter in Burlington, Vermont. Also on the job in Vermont are other ERVs deployed from other chapters around the country, as well as rental trucks to supplement the ERV fleet.

First stop for Mah and Harrell was the Red Cross warehouse near Rutland. Typical of most travel in the aftermath of Tropical Storm Irene that washed out hundreds of roads and bridges around the state, travel to the warehouse involves a long detour around a washed-out bridge on Route 7 south of Rutland. Once at the warehouse the pair selected supplies that they anticipated would help residents cleaning up after flooding – pairs of sturdy work gloves, shovels and flashlights, paper towels and bleach, snacks and duct tape, cleanup kits and comfort kits, pallets of water and sandwiches. Everything was loaded into the back of the ERV and carefully secured.

Mah and Harrell had some general directions from Red Cross damage assessment teams who had been through these towns and neighborhoods before, but needed more specific information on neighborhoods flooded and roads closed.

They stopped first at the Shrewsbury Town Offices and met with Town Clerk Mark Goodwin. Goodwin showed them on detailed maps the roads, bridges, and neighborhoods that had been affected by the storm. Mah and Harrell then slowly and carefully made the circuit of roads, stopping to offer supplies and an encouraging word to residents and to town road crews working on the roads. They made a similar visit to the postmistress at the East Wallingford post office in the next town over.

“We came across a number of residents working at their homes as we drove the roads, and gave out our cleaning supplies and water to help them in their efforts,” said Mah. “We were able to return to Rutland with our ERV nearly empty, which is what we try to do. “ He added “Cleanup supplies sitting in the warehouse don’t do anyone any good – our job on the ERV is to get these supplies to the people that need them, when they need them.”


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