Thursday, November 03, 2005

Re: A second report from the side

--- Fred Juergens <fredjuergens@charter.net> wrote:

> I'm two weeks into my first-ever volunteer service
> with the American Red Cross, and my understanding
> of its mission, accomplishments and needs is growing
> daily.
>
> First, I've learned that, even before Hurricane
> Wilma struck south Florida, RC's efforts in the
> aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita have
> required over fifteen (15!) times the number of
> volunteers and resources that have ever been needed
> in a single year in the history of Red Cross. Think
> of the incredible outpouring of donated time and
> money from the American people to assist fellow
> Americans in need.
>
> Since Hurricane Katrina made landfall, Red Cross
> has donated direct financial assistance in a variety
> of ways, including debit cards, vouchers, checks and
> cash, to about 1.2 million families, totalling more
> than 3.7 million men, women and children. Red Cross
> has provided hurricane survivors with nearly 3.4
> million overnight stays in nearly 1,100 shelters
> across 27 states and the District of Columbia.
> More than 211,400 Red Cross disaster relief workers
> from all 50 states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin
> Islands have responded. Red Cross, in coordination
> with the Southern Baptist Convention, has served
> more than 26.3 million hot meals and 23.2 million
> snacks to hurricane survivors to date. And through
> the Emergency Response Call Center, where I
> volunteer, we've answered almost 900,000 calls from
> hurricane victims to direct them to other resources
> for assistance, help that is outside the scope of
> the RC's mission of immediate emergency relief.
>
> Second, I've also learned that Red Cross' efforts,
> massive as they are, do not always measure up to our
> mission. Red Cross estimates that half a million
> callers hung up because our hotlines were so busy.
> Hopefully they called back and finally got through.
> Yesterday a distraught lady from rural east Texas
> called me on the hotline. She was a day-laborer who
> hadn't worked in several weeks, because no work was
> to be had. She needed money for the co-pay required
> by her state's program to assist low income people
> in paying for their prescriptions. She needed money
> to buy more propane to heat the mobile home in which
> she lived. She finally received RC's debit card in
> the mail, more than a month after she had applied at
> a temporary service center RC had set up in the
> little town near her home. She was so grateful it
> came, she said. She barely had money to buy gasoline
> to drive to the nearest ATM. And then...it didn't
> work. The temporary service center had closed weeks
> before!
> , she didn't know how to reach RC in a larger Texas
> city, and so she called the hotline. She was
> crying, and I felt so inadequate to help her. I
> informed the Red Cross in Texas of her plight, so
> they could imediately look into why her card
> wouldn't work; however, on the phone, all I could do
> was listen sympathetically to her story and suggest
> that she contact a local church or other charitable
> agency to request more immediate help. It's
> experiences like these that really take a toll on me
> and the many other hotline volunteers. We're trying
> to do so much, and sometimes we fall short. It's
> very frustrating and humbling.
>
> Third, I've come to realize how much most Americans
> take for granted as we proceed through our daily
> lives, how fragile is the hold on a decent life for
> many of our neighbors and countrymen, and how
> inadequately most of us are prepared to take care of
> ourselves in a disaster, let alone "promote the
> general welfare", as it says in the Preamble to the
> United States Constitution. The Red Cross has a
> brochure available that details what every family
> should do to prepare, well in advance, for a
> potential emergency; what supplies every household
> should store up, just in case; a communications plan
> to let others know where they are and if they're
> safe. I'd be surprised if more than 1/4 of
> Evansville's households have made such emergency
> preparations; I know I haven't. It will be high on
> my list of priorities when I return home. Don't say
> it won't happen to you; remember the tornado that
> hit Stoughton a few months ago. The Janesville RC
> office can either send you such a brochure !
> or tell you where to get one.
>
> Four other Wisconsin Red Cross volunteers here at
> the Call Center, Beryl from Union, Jane from
> Madison, Paul from West Bend, and Arley from Lac
> Courte O'reilles, and I made an excursion to our
> nation's capital yesterday. We had a purpose; it
> was not just for fun. First, we visited Senator
> Herb Kohl. Senator Kohl meets his constituents for
> a regularly scheduled breakfast in his office each
> Wednesday whenever Congress is in session. With
> some 15 other Wisconsinites not there on Red Cross
> business, we talked with Kohl and his staff about
> concerns we had. Naturally, we five described our
> work as Red Cross volunteers and asked him to
> evaluate and improve the government's programs to
> assist disaster victims. We wanted to impress on
> him the continuing needs of people in the Gulf Coast
> area, to tell him of our first-hand experiences to
> bring the message home. It was a very cordial
> visit. From there, we made a spontaneous stop at
> Senator Russ Feingold's office to take our mes!
> sage there. He was not in, but one of his aides
> generously sat down with us for an extended
> discussion; I feel confident that Feingold will
> learn of what we've been doing and the need to aid
> people in the south. After that, we visited
> Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin's office. She was
> attending Rosa Parks' services; we again pressed our
> message to her aides. One of her interns, Carley, a
> college student in Washington for a semester through
> a Marquette University program, generously gave us a
> behind-the scenes tour of the Capitol Building, and
> we had lunch in the basement cafeteria used by the
> staff of the House of Representatives. Then we
> returned to the Call Center to work our 3pm-11:30pm
> shift on the telephones.
>
> This morning a good friend of mine, Carolyn from
> Madison who's a long-time Red Cross volunteer,
> called me from Key West, Florida, where she is
> working after Hurricane Wilma. She and her Disaster
> Action Team are walking the streets of the city,
> looking for people who may need assistance. She
> says trees and power lines are down all over, cars
> damaged by the salt-water storm surge are abandoned
> in the streets, it's hot and humid, and conditions
> are made worse by continuing rains in the last few
> days. She says they just have to pick their way
> through the rubble everywhere. Fortunately the power
> is back on in parts of the city. I told her that,
> two nights ago, I had talked with a disabled man in
> a wheel chair in that city; he was running out of
> food and had no one else to turn to for help. His
> cell phone cut out before I could get more details.
> He was just lost to me. I wonder what happened to
> that man, if Carolyn will find him, if he's found
> the help he needs, somehow, !
> somewhere.
>
> I'll never again be the same person I was before I
> took on this task with the Red Cross. I feel so
> fortunate that I have had the opportunity to help
> other people -- people I've never seen and whose
> future lives I won't ever know about. My sense of
> responsibility for other human beings has vastly
> increased. On the other hand, I've learned how hard
> it is to do this work; I'm really tired. I know I'm
> doing important work and I will persevere to the end
> of my three-week stint here at the Call Center. I
> will volunteer again in the future. I have immense
> respect for the Red Cross volunteers actually
> working in disaster areas. Their task is much
> harder than mine. One older lady working at the call
> center told me this is her 27th national disaster
> volunteer position, that she regrets she's too old
> to actually work in the field any longer. I hope
> that all who read this can find a way to contribute
> to the Red Cross mission to aid the victims of all
> the disasters, big and small!
> , that strike Americans year after year.
>
> Best wishes,
> Fred Juergens
>

1 comment:

  1. Thank you again for sharing your updates. The facts are mind blowing to me, and I was moved to tears when I realized how much more help is needed. It seems we could never do enough, yet we can't let that stop us from doing what we can. Your dedication proves this and is an inspiration. Thank you. Peace and blessings!

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