Landing the Big One

Landing the Big One

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Work Now - Blame Later

In the midst of what may be the largest natural disaster to ever strike the United States, as tons of material and personnel begin to pour into the area to render aid and help begin the rebuilding process, as brave people place their own lives on hold to come and help, as millions are dispaced, as power crew struggle to reassemble the grid, refinery workers try to clean up and get their plants restarted, as the ports are being surveyed, as the transportation system lies in a shambles, as tired pilots boat operators and their crews continue to pluck the living from the land of the dead, much, much work is to be done.

Let's get to it.

If you feel the need to lay blame or fault or point fingers - why can't you wait until the still living have been rescued and the dead have been recovered? Why not wait until refugees have been sheltered? The homelesss fed? The shelters built? Why not help solve the problem facing us now?

Donate- volunteer - please do something to ease the plight of those affected.

The following is reposted from an earlier date:

Pick one! (material is from the websites of the agencies)

donate
Red Cross
The American Red Cross has mobilized thousands of volunteers to respond in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, which completely devastated parts of Louisiana and left at least 55 people dead.

The Red Cross plans to send close to 2,000 volunteers in the area to begin the initial response in the next few days.

Red Cross emergency response vehicles (ERVs) will visit damaged neighborhoods like this one in Florida after Hurricane Charley last year. (Photo: Bonnie Gillespie).

“Volunteers are truly the lifeblood of the American Red Cross, and we are calling on them now by the thousands to help support relief efforts in Louisiana and other states after Katrina,” said Pat McCrummen, American Red Cross disaster spokesperson. “We are looking at a long term, very significant response to this storm.”

The Red Cross is mobilizing every available resource from across the country including thousands of staff and volunteers to respond to this storm. Red Cross volunteers and donors are neighbors helping neighbors.

Volunteers are already on the ground staffing shelters for tens of thousands of people in five states—Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Texas.

The Red Cross is launching the largest mobilization of resources for a single natural domestic disaster, in part because the extent of the damage is so widespread over a large geographical area. New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin including sending nearly 1,900 staff and volunteers into the field in the next few days, and sending more than 250 Emergency Response Vehicles (ERVs) out to provide food and water to affected residents.
donate
Salvation Army
The Salvation Army is prepared to serve 400,000 hot meals per day to residents and first responders in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. More than 200 volunteers, employees and officers will serve the meals from 72 mobile canteens that are able to provide up to 5,000 hot meals per day. In addition, the Army is prepared to move in two, 54-foot mobile kitchens that can provide 20,000 hot meals per day.

UPDATE:
Southern Baptists gear up, too, including bringing laundries (a great idea for people who have been living in one set of clothes), see here (caption:
Laundry service
A Tennessee Baptist Disaster Relief crew headed to the Gulf Coast is equipped with a new laundry unit based out of First Baptist Church in Hendersonville, Tenn. David Acres, director of the state’s disaster relief teams, inspected the machines before departing from the staging area at Cherry Road Baptist Church in Memphis, Tenn. The system, capable of washing about 20 loads of laundry per hour, contains a hot water heater, four washer units and five dryer units, he said. Photo by Morris Abernathy )
More info on donations to the Baptists' North American Mission Board Diaster Relief here.

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