Press Release: Red Cross Begins Client Casework in Southeast

September 27, 2009

newsrelease

American Red Cross begins client casework in Southeast
More than 430 volunteers and staff aid in Red Cross response

ATLANTA, September 27, 2009– The American Red Cross began client casework today as preliminary damage assessment shows that nearly 2,000 homes have been affected by flooding in 20 counties in the Southeast.

Ron Kitchens, who lives in Austelle, Ga., returned earlier this week to find flood waters had lifted his one-story ranch off its brick-and-mortar foundation and floated it down the street. The home now rests in the middle of the dead-end road.

Despite the fact that Kitchens and his wife can’t enter the house, they remain upbeat.

“We’re a lot luckier than some. We got out alive,” Kitchens said as he sifted through a Red Cross clean-up kit. “You gotta keep living. You gotta keep going.”

The Red Cross continues to provide shelter, food, mental health counseling and emotional support for residents throughout the affected areas.

Thirteen Red Cross disaster assessment teams surveyed homes again Sunday. Preliminary reports indicate that 1,939 homes in Georgia have been affected; 459 of which are destroyed, 517 with major damage.

Through mobile outreach into flood-affected areas, Red Cross caseworkers are connecting one-on-one with people in need and providing financial assistance for food, clothing, shelter and health-related concerns.

Along with providing emotional support, caseworkers can direct clients to recovery resources in the community, including Red Cross Distribution Centers for clean-up supplies (mops, brooms, pails, etc.) and personal hygiene items.

The Red Cross is working with emergency partners in the hard-hit communities of Marietta, Powder Springs and Austell to establish Distribution Centers for clean-up items and bottled water, which will be replenished throughout the day (Monday-Friday 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.):

o Lawrenceville Fire Dept. Station 20
   1801 Curse Road
   Lawrenceville,, GA 30044

o Powder Springs Police Department
   4483 Pineview Drive
   Powder Springs, GA 30127

o Best Buy – Douglasville
   6875 Douglas Blvd.
   Douglasville, GA 30135

o Austell Shopping Center
    5875 Love St.
   Austell, GA 30168

Since flooding began through Sunday morning, the Red Cross:

• Has provided nearly 1,500 overnight shelter stays for about 500 affected residents and has provided more than 9,500 meals
• Has more than 430 volunteers and staff from 18 states on the ground in affected areas to support the disaster-caused needs of clients
• Has 21 Emergency Response Vehicles serving as mobile and fixed site feeding stations
• Currently, the Red Cross has two shelters open in Cobb County and Cherokee County:

o Cobb County Civic Center
    548 South Marietta Parkway
    Marietta, GA 30060

o Cherokee Recreation and Parks Agency (South Annex)
    7545 Main St. Building 200
    Woodstock, GA 30188

• Has provided more than 15,000 bulk items including bleach, comfort kits, clean-up kits and bottled water.

The U.S. government has declared 14 of the 20 affected counties in Georgia as federal disaster areas – Carroll, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cherokee, Cobb, DeKalb, Douglas, Fulton, Gwinnett, Newton, Paulding, Rockdale, Stephens and Walker.

How to Help

1. Donate to the Red Cross. You can help people affected by disasters like the current floods by donating to the American Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund. On those rare occasions when donations exceed Red Cross expenses for a specific disaster, contributions are used to prepare for and serve victims of other disasters. Visit www.redcross.org or call 1-800-RED-CROSS

2. Donate blood. The need for blood is constant and the Southern Blood Services Region is committed to continuing to provide blood and blood products to those in need at all times. Visit www.redcross.org or call 1-800-RED-CROSS to find a drive near you.

3. Donate your time. Sign up as a Red Cross volunteer. Visit www.redcross.org.

For continuous updates visit http://newsroom.redcross.org.

 

 


Southeast Floods: Fast Facts as of 9.26.09

September 26, 2009

The following information shows our total service delivery since the beginning of the Georgia floods:

Shelters opened: 7
Shelter Overnight Stays: 1,250*
Meals served: 6,105*
Snacks served: 7,266*
Comfort kits distributed: 389
Clean up kits distributed: 767*
Emergency Response Vehicles on the ground: 21*
Mental Health Consultations: 225*
Health Services Consultations:193*
Red Cross workers involved: 295*


Press Release: Arizona Red Cross Volunteers Deploy to Georgia

September 25, 2009

newsrelease

Local Volunteers Deploy to Georgia to Help with Flood Relief

 (PHOENIX) September 25, 2009 – Arizona Red Cross volunteers are deploying to Georgia to help people impacted by floods in the southeast. They will be processed today at 2:30 p.m. at the Phoenix Office located at 6135 N. Black Canyon Highway.

The volunteers will serve as client caseworkers. They will listen to the clients’ stories and review disaster assessments to determine their emergency needs.

Nearly 400 people spent the night in Red Cross shelters in Georgia and Tennessee. Nearly 200 Red Crossers and 18 mass mobile feeding vehicles are on the ground providing support. Cleaning supplies and comfort kits are being distributed and thousands of meals have been served to those affected by the flooding. Officials say early estimates show as many as 3,000 homes may be affected with damages estimated at $250 million.

Red Cross volunteers have to make a three week commitment when going on a national assignment. They often face physical hardships. Hardships in this operation include water disruption, power outages, air quality, and extreme heat/humidity.


Press Release: Southeast Louisiana Disaster Teams Head to Georgia and Tennessee

September 25, 2009

newsrelease

Southeast Louisiana Chapter Disaster Teams Head East
Red Cross Workers Respond to Massive Flooding in Georgia and Tennessee

New Orleans, LA, September 25, 2009– Local disaster volunteers are traveling east to Atlanta, GA to assist with the recovery efforts caused by massive flooding in Georgia and Tennessee earlier this week. The American Red Cross has sent more than 200 volunteers and staff and 18 Emergency Response Vehicles (ERVs) to Georgia and Tennessee with more on standby. Clean up and comfort kits are being distributed and almost 2,000 meals have been served to those affected by the flooding. Officials say early estimates show as many as 3,000 homes may be affected with damages estimated at $250 million.

“The call came today for additional disaster workers who are needed to support relief efforts in Atlanta,” said Kay Wilkins, CEO of the Southeast Louisiana Chapter. “In response, our chapter is sending five local volunteers to support bulk distribution and casework operations.”

Today Cheryl Cadigan, a local volunteer from Slidell, departed for Atlanta. She will be involved with casework operations once she arrives at the disaster response operations. Saturday morning (tomorrow), Thomas Bulter (from Metairie), Christopher Meizen, Lauren Powell, and Brittany (Collins) Feeser will depart from the Southeast Louisiana Chapter Headquarters for Atlanta, where they will be working to support the bulk distribution operations. Christopher, Lauren and Collins are National Preparedness Response Corp (NPRC) members who began their 10-month commitment with the Southeast Louisiana Chapter on Monday, August 3, 2009.

“This is what makes volunteering special with the Red Cross,” explains Kay Wilkins “We’re a large family. When a member is in need, you pack up and help them through their difficulty. Red Cross volunteers in other states have provided us with the same generosity of their time and skills many times before.”

Chapter volunteers are trained to provide a variety of disaster relief services for the people they help. “It is extremely rewarding work and the volunteers always say they get so much more from the people they help than vice versa” continues, Kay Wilkins. “Just as the Red Cross asks local Louisiana residents to be prepared for emergencies, volunteers must be ready prior to a disaster. The Chapter offers training classes for volunteers to be knowledgeable about what is involved in disaster response from the large scale hurricane responses to our number one and daily response to residential fires.”


Southeast Floods: Fast Facts as of 9.25.09

September 25, 2009

The following information shows our total service delivery since the beginning of the Georgia floods:

Shelters opened: 7
Shelter Overnight Stays: 651
Meals served: 3,611
Snacks served: 6,423
Comfort kits distributed: 389
Clean up kits distributed: 367
Emergency Response Vehicles on the ground: 7
Mental Health Consultations: 133
Health Services Consultations:168
Red Cross workers involved: 213


Disaster Alert: Wildfires in Washington

September 16, 2009

Disaster Alert

Washington – Wildfires near the town of Nespelem, on the Colville Indian Reservation, prompted the evacuation of a local convalescent center, residents of the White Buffalo area, and the closure of Highway 155. Firefighters contained the fire within 12 hours and residents were allowed to return to their homes. The Inland Northwest chapter opened a shelter and delivered comfort kits to the affected residents.


Disaster Alert: Wildfire in Washington

August 24, 2009

Disaster Alert

Washington – A fast moving wildfire in Okanogan County burned hundreds of acres, disabled power lines and threatened dozens of homes. Residents in the affected area were ordered to evacuate. The chapters deployed a Disaster Action Team (DAT), opened a shelter and distributed comfort kits to affected residents.

Chapters Responding:
o Inland Northwest
North Cascades


Murfreesboro, TN Tornado: Press Release 4.14.09

April 14, 2009

newsrelease

Murfreesboro, TN Tornado

Red Cross Transitions Shelter into Feeding Site and Respite Center
Meals, Snacks, Clean-up Kits, Comfort Kits, Minor First Aid, Grief Counseling Continue

[Murfreesboro, Tenn., April 14, 2009] – As the Red Cross continues providing food, water, snacks, comfort kits, clean up kits, minor first aid and grief counseling to victims of the Good Friday tornadoes, the Red Cross shelter at the New Vision Baptist Church, located at 1750 North Thompson Lane, is transitioning into a fixed feeding site and respite center, after having a shelter population of zero both Sunday and Monday nights.

Meanwhile, the Red Cross is continuing to focus its efforts on outreach today, taking Emergency Response Vehicles with comfort kits, clean up kits, meals, snacks, bottled water and trained mental health professionals into the communities affected, serving both tornado victims as well as other emergency workers and volunteers in the area.

Since the tornado relief operation began, your American Red Cross has:

-Activated 255 Local Volunteers
-Distributed more than 12,000 meals and snacks
-Provided grief counseling and first aid to more than 500 victims

With continuing inquiries from friends and family members from outside of the Murfreesboro area worried about those affected, the Red Cross is urging everyone who was affected by these storms to visit www.safeandwell.org and register themselves as being safe and well. Then, family members and friends can visit the same site and see that their family members are okay. If victims cannot access the Internet, they can call 1-800-REDCROSS and have a Red Cross volunteer register their name on the safe and well website.

HOW TO HELP
You can help people affected by this disaster, by donating to the American Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund. On those rare occasions when donations exceed Red Cross expenses for a specific disasters, contributions are used to prepare for and serve victims of other disasters. Your gift enables the Red Cross to provide shelter, food, counseling and other assistance to victims of all disasters. You can visit www.redcross.org or call 1-800-REDCROSS or 1-800-257-7575 (Spanish) or mail your donation, to the American Red Cross, P.O. Box 37243, Washington, DC 20013.

**You can also donate by simply texting the word GIVE from your cell phone to the number 24357 and donate $5 to the Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund.**

You can also donate to help the victims of the Murfreesboro tornadoes at any Middle Tennessee Kroger store at the register as you check out. Just tell the cashier you would like to make a donation to the Red Cross for the Central Tennessee tornadoes.

The Red Cross is NOT accepting any donations of clothing, furniture or any other material items. If you would like to volunteer, the CITY OF MURFREESBORO is asking you to call (615) 890-1934.


Disaster Alert: NY Power and Water Loss

January 15, 2009

Disaster Alert

Yesterday, the Red Cross responded to the following event:

  • White Plains, NYExtreme cold temperatures resulted in loss of water and heating service to some residents in Yonkers. The Westchester County Chapter assisted at an overnight shelter. The chapter is providing dinner, breakfast, snacks, and comfort kits.

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