|
August 16, 2004
United Methodists to help with Charley relief
By United Methodist News Service
As Floridians begin to recover from the effects of Hurricane Charley,
United Methodists are responding to relief needs.
The hurricane, described by the United Methodist Committee on Relief
as the worst storm to hit western Florida in 100 years, struck Aug. 13
before surging up the East Coast to the Carolinas and Virginia. The
hurricane, with its sustained winds of 131 mph to 155 mph, was
responsible for at least 16 deaths and billions of dollars in damage to
Florida alone.
Anticipating Hurricane Charley's arrival, UMCOR had shipped all
available flood buckets to Florida from its Sager Brown Depot in
Louisiana. Partnering with the agency on providing flood cleanup
supplies were Mercy Center in North Carolina; Midwest Distribution
Center, Illinois, and Mission Central, Pennsylvania.
F. Thomas Hazelwood, UMCOR's director of emergency services, was
scheduled to arrive Aug. 16 in Florida to meet with church-related
disaster coordinators and assist with assessment of relief needs.
Members of the United Methodist Florida Annual Conference also met Aug.
15 in Orlando to begin formulating a response.
"We're in the phase of trying to assess communities," said the Rev.
David Harris, the Florida Conference's disaster response coordinator and
pastor of Trinity United Methodist Church, Arcadia, Fla. Harris told
e-Review, the conference's online news service, that several districts
contacted him to find out what can be done, but it's not clear at this
point which areas will be the focus of relief efforts.
The members of the conference disaster response team will be meeting
people's needs from Fort Myers to Daytona Beach and along the state's
I-4 corridor, according to the e-Review.
The goal for the Aug. 16 meeting would be to decide a strategy for
the response, said the Rev. Larry Rankin, director of the conference's
Equipping Network's Missions ministry and disaster response efforts.
"Some areas . . . we just don't know yet (the extent of damage) because
of the communications. Many communities still do not have electricity or
ways to communicate their needs," he said. Churches along the storm's
path would become centers of relief coordination, according to the
Florida conference's website.
The disaster response team expected to receive damage reports from
district offices and disaster response coordinators at the Aug. 16
meeting.
The Arcadia area received significant damage from the hurricane,
Harris said. "Most of the homes here are sticks and lots of trailer
parks look like war zones. The devastation is horrible. There is
tremendous damage to downtown and buildings have been cordoned off." The
extent of the damage in Arcadia is similar to the devastation in the
retirement communities of Port Charlotte and Punta Gorda. President
George Bush, a United Methodist, toured devastated areas by helicopter
on Aug. 15 and provided comfort to Punta Gorda residents.
Harris said that churches have been assisting in relief efforts by
delivering food house-to-house and by arranging crews to help tarp roofs
so that people will be dry. "At Trinity, we opened our church up and
delivered more than 1,000 meals to people on Aug. 15," he said.
The damage to the Arcadia area compelled Harris to relinquish his
disaster response coordinator position to Rankin. "My area was hit so
hard that I had to step out of the role. There are make-shift strategies
going on all over," he said.
Knowing that the Hurricane Charley would leave significant damage
behind, the conference's claims adjustment company was open over the
Aug. 13-15 weekend to receive property claims from United Methodist
churches.
Prior to giving up the reins, Harris told e-Review that there is one
certain thing about relief efforts. "This may take quite some time to
finish working with those who are affected by this disaster. We [the
United Methodist Church] are here for the long haul," he said. "When the
news has stopped reporting the impact of Charley, when the agencies have
all left Florida, we will still be here, and we will need to continue
our focus on helping people."
Volunteers wanting to assist in recovery efforts may call UMCOR's
toll-free volunteer hotline at 800-918-3100.
UMCOR is asking United Methodist to help replenish its supply of
flood buckets in what is now the beginning of hurricane season. The
buckets include such items as sponges, brushes, trash bags and various
types of cleaning materials. Specifications can be found at
gbgm-umc.org/umcor/print/kits
online. Completed flood buckets should be sent to UMCOR Sager
Brown, 101 Sager Brown Rd., Baldwin, LA 70514.
UMCOR is also requesting donations for its Material Resource
Ministry, Advance #901440 for cleaning supplies that the staff and
volunteers at the Sager Brown Depot will use to assemble flood buckets.
Donations for the denomination's response to Charley and other
hurricanes should be earmarked for Hurricanes 20004, UMCOR Advance No.
982410. Checks written to UMCOR can be placed in church offering plates
or mailed directly to UMCOR, 475 Riverside Dr., Room 330, New York, N.Y.
10115. Credit card donations can be made by calling, toll-free,
800-554-8583.
# # #If
you know someone who has yet to sign up for e-HUM,
they simply need to send a blank e-mail from their preferred e-mail
account to add@inareaumc.org.
e-HUM Alert copyright
2004 by Indiana Area United Methodist Communications.
|