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Ohio
Conference United Church of Christ |
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Keep Safe Louisiana - a flyer of safety tips for flood recovery workers |
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| Disaster Response Team • Gulf Coast Hurricane Response | |
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Contact Back Bay Mission's Volunteer Coordinator at bbvol@datasync.com. Contact
UCC
Volunteer Ministries. |
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2008 Mission Trip to New Orleans Who: YOU and Ohio Conference UCC Disaster Response Team [co-Director is Rev. George Siddall, who is heading up this mission trip.] What: A mission trip to New Orleans to assist our brothers and sisters in Christ When: May 10th through May 18th, 2008 Where: New Orleans Why: The need is still so great! The chance to join with others to help in the recovery of the Gulf Coast. Cost: $300.00 covers van rental, fuel, donation to St. Paul Church (where we will be staying), donation for supplies, motel for 2 nights, breakfast and lunch while in New Orleans, and a few dinners. Not covered in cost is food while traveling and special dinners/events, such as Bourbon St. (On Wednesday, May 14, the UCC staff in New Orleans will take the team on a tour of the affected areas and elsewhere.) Registration: A $150.00 check or money order made out to George Siddall and sent to him at 403 Green Gate Drive, Lebanon, OH 45036-8573 by March 15, 2008 holds your place on the team. Needed to make this mission trip possible: 1 person in 8 who is knowledgeable in home repair/rehab technique, especially roofing, sheet rocking, house framing or flooring finished carpentry. The goal is 20 to 25 team members. Links: Go to www.ucc.org. Click on Change the World, then Disaster Response. Follow prompts to get you to an insightful article about the recovery work on the Gulf Coast. |
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One house, one wall, one nail at a time
The force of the water that crashed inland from Katrina tore a wing from this home, turned it and washed it down a slope toward a ditch. The home is west of Biloxi, Mississippi, about three blocks from the ocean. |
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March 2006
By Pam Brown, Disaster Response Team Member I recently stood in a deserted New Orleans neighborhood, all its buildings marred by the same black water line five feet from the ground. Inside the homes, black mold creeps up the walls. It is one of the places where the water from Lake Pontchartrain intruded. In East Biloxi, I saw large open areas bordered by sidewalks, scattered with debris and damaged trees. These used to be neighborhoods full of homes before the seawater from Katrina washed them all away. For miles along I-10 into New Orleans, I passed street after street of empty homes scarred by broken out windows, blue tarp-covered roofs, and the spray painted codes left by searchers looking for those who survived—and those who did not. There is no electricity, gas or drinkable water. Heaps of possessions molder at the curb. Yards are the gritty brown of salt-burned grass, sand and countless bits of debris, the remnants of several feet of dirty water that stood for days and drove the people out. Some of them may live in the tents that huddle in a nearby city park. I have walked through a Biloxi shoreline neighborhood of comfortable homes disfigured by gaping holes exposing the rooms inside, like monstrous dollhouses. This is one of the neighborhoods where the storm surge blasted through. I traveled Highway 90, which follows the beach along the Mississippi coast. I could not describe it better than Shari Prestemon, Director of Back Bay Mission: "The farther west I traveled, toward what had been the eye of the storm…the terrible destruction evolved into absolute annihilation. "First there were homes and churches and other structures gutted violently by the power of water but still somehow standing; then there was simply nothing… for mile after mile after mile." No words or photos can convey the scope of the Gulf Coast devastation. My husband Dail and I visited the area in February, six months after the hurricane. Recovery has certainly begun and some people have started to rebuild, but much of the work we saw was cleanup and demolition, not rebuilding. There are signs of hope and determination all along the coast. We saw signs spray painted on plywood, propped against piles of rubble: "We’ll rebuild," "We’ll be back," or "We’re still here!" A flagpole, stuck in the ground next to a concrete slab scattered with the remains of a home, bears two American flags. The top flag is clean and new; red and white stripes shredded into "fringe" flutter from the dirty one below. A storm survivor. The folks who put it there are cleaning up, starting over. But many Gulf Coast residents face an overwhelming task and years of toil, uncertainty, sorrow and fatigue. We found ourselves wondering how they could face each day. How do you accomplish such a thing? Our answer—one thing at a time. One house, one wall, one nail. I have read about possible federal rebuilding aid. Insurance checks will help some people. Some will rebuild by draining their savings. But there are thousands of families who have none of these resources. They need other help. The United Church of Christ and other faith communities are in place for the long haul, providing that help, one person at a time. Volunteers are essential to these efforts. Back Bay Mission is hosting work groups who live in comfortable, new mobile homes on the BBM campus and are dispatched to neighborhood homes to clean up or begin repairs. In New Orleans, Alan Coe, the South Central Conference Minister for Disaster Recovery, coordinates the UCC response. Our own Conference Disaster Response Director, Jim Ditzler, and his wife Linda are giving six months of their lives and their considerable talents to assist work groups in the area. Three UCC churches house the volunteers. We will return to Biloxi for a week in December with others from our church in Westerville. It takes a long time for volunteers to repair a home stripped down to the wall studs after a flood. With so many homes needing so much work, will what we accomplish in a week really make any difference? We believe it will —one volunteer, one nail, one wall at a time. Unless you look for it, the Gulf Coast devastation is nearly invisible from Ohio, but great need remains and will continue for many years. If you can go and help, go. If you can’t, support those who can through your local church, the Ohio Conference Disaster Response Ministry, Back Bay Mission, or our national hurricane recovery fund, Hope Shall Bloom. Dollars are always needed, at every level of response — one dollar at a time. For information about a work trip to Back Bay, visit backbaymission.com or email volunteer coordinator Peg Jacobs at bbvol@datasync.com. For information or to schedule a work trip to New Orleans through UCC Volunteer Ministries, visit http://www.ucc.org/volunteer/ and click on Hurricane Volunteers.
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February 2006 Disaster Response volunteers travel to Mississippi Workers and donations are needed • Recovery will take at least 3 – 4 years While
most of us were finishing our Christmas shopping and enjoying holiday
parties last December, a ten-member team of UCC volunteers, sponsored by
the Ohio Conference Disaster Response Ministry Team, spent a week in
Mississippi, working on homes damaged by Hurricane Katrina and seeing
firsthand the immense scope of the recovery work that faces the
region. By George Siddall, Disaster Response Team Co-Director On December 2, 2005 our group of volunteers (nine from Ohio, one from Indiana) gathered at Washington UCC in Cincinnati, to begin the trip to Ocean Springs, Mississippi. Two days of travel (and an overnight stay in a Disciples of Christ church in Birmingham, Alabama) brought the group on December 4 to the C.O.R.E. (Christians Organized for the Relief Effort) Base Camp, on the grounds of the new building of St. Paul United Methodist Church in Ocean Springs. During our stay, we slept in 10-person tents (most of which were donated by Russia), bathed in either a shower trailer or shower tent, and ate our meals in the church social hall. The food was prepared by a volunteer group from Michigan. After breakfast each day, more than seventy volunteers and staff gathered in the sanctuary for devotions, received our assignments for the day from the team leaders, then spent the rest of the day trying to bring hurricane-damaged houses back to livable condition. Some of our team installed insulation and dry wall, then replaced metal electric outlet and switch boxes that had been corroded by the salt water. Others rewired two double-wide mobile homes with a single roof-over with an addition, where a grandmother and mother were raising foster children. Still others worked at tear out, clean-up, and sanitizing another home. On the last two days, three of our members rehabbed the deck at the home of a couple who had spent the first four weeks after the hurricane as volunteers at St. Paul Church. They handled donations and volunteers, answered phones and did whatever else had to be done in the initial response. On December 7, we went to Back Bay Mission in Biloxi and visited with Executive Director, Shari Prestemon, and some of her staff about their plans and needs for recovery. Our tour of Biloxi was eye-opening and depressing. We saw block after block where houses had been bulldozed and replaced by a FEMA trailer or two sitting next to driveways that had once led to homes. We returned home on December 10 and 11 (staying overnight at a Disciples of Christ church in Nashville, Tennessee), feeling fulfilled and blessed by the experience. Trip participants were Burt Badenhop, Indianapolis; Dave Bucey, Cincinnati; Karl Bucey, Youngstown; Patty DiGiacobbe, Brookfield; Jim Ditzler, Wooster; Nancy Matthew, Cincinnati; Gary and Terry Mennell, Medina; George Siddall, Lebanon; and Michelle White, Cincinnati. Patty, Jim, and George are members of the Disaster Response Ministry Team. Back Bay Mission started accepting volunteers to work on hurricane recovery in Biloxi in the first week of January. For inquiries and to volunteer, contact Peg Jacobs at 228.432.0301. Donations may be sent to1012 Division Street, Biloxi, Mississippi, 39530. Updates are on Back Bay’s website: www.backbaymission.com. We urge you to consider Back Bay as a priority for your mission trips, because it will take a minimum of three or four years for recovery. For information on the C.O.R.E Base Camp arrangements, you may contact me, George Siddall, at 513.228.0515 or email at: gtsiddall@juno.com. |
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Ohio Conference Disaster Response Team members are working with other relief agencies to mobilize responses to the catastrophes on the Gulf Coast. "We have had many calls, offers of help and donations. People all over the Conference are preparing to help. We are very grateful for every response, and we are working to help organize them effectively." "Several of our churches are already planning work trips to the Gulf Coast next summer," said George Siddall, co-director of the Ohio Conference Disaster Response Team. If your congregation is interested in sending volunteers to a Gulf Coast community, the Disaster Response Team can help you.
The Ohio Conference Disaster Response Team is committed to the long-term recovery and rebuilding effort needed in situations like this. Your members can make a visible, tangible difference to families who are trying to rebuild their lives but who need some outside help. Please consider dedicating some of your congregation’s resources to this hands-on ministry—this summer, next summer and the year after that. The need will go on. |
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Ohio Conference UCC, 6161
Busch Blvd., Suite 95, Columbus OH 43229 • 800-282-0740 • 614-885-0722 • ohioucc@ocucc.org |
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