Red Cross Responds To Midwest Flooding
Main Category: Aid / DisastersArticle Date: 23 Aug 2007 - 0:00 PDT
Rain storms, including remnants of Tropical Storm Erin, have caused persistent flooding throughout parts of the Midwest and southern U.S. This flooding has damaged thousands of homes and businesses, and has claimed at least twenty lives. Local chapters of the Red Cross are offering a variety of services to those affected by this flooding, from sheltering and feeding affected residents and emergency workers, to providing damage assessment and counseling to families as they begin to recover from their losses.
Whether the relief operation is managed through a local chapter or through national headquarters, the Red Cross remains at a constant state of readiness. "The Red Cross, at both the national and local levels, works throughout the year to ensure we are ready to help communities during and following a disaster," remarked Joe Becker, Senior Vice President of Preparedness and Response for the American Red Cross. "We know that the key to our being able to do our job for the American public is for us to be prepared ahead of time."
Severe storms have caused raging floods through different regions of the country for several weeks now. Tropical Storm Erin prompted massive flooding in parts of Texas and Oklahoma. Many of these areas were already saturated from the elevated rainfall during previous weeks. As relief operations in Texas and Oklahoma continue, approximately 20 counties in Minnesota, Wisconsin and northeast Iowa are under assault by more recent flooding, much of it along the Mississippi river. Local chapters in Minnesota have quickly refocused their efforts after supporting the rescue and recovery operation following the bridge collapse along I-35W. Red Cross chapters are also providing services to those affected by flooding in northwest Ohio.
As these disasters are in different response and recovery phases, the Red Cross is offering a range of services to support each of these relief efforts:
Chapter workers have opened shelters and distributed thousands of meals and snacks to affected people, rescue workers and those assisting in the relief operation.
More than 30 emergency response vehicles have mobilized across these areas, distributing food and supplies such as clean-up kits to residents as they begin sorting through debris and collecting their personal items.
As the initial sheltering and feeding efforts subside at each of these locations, Red Cross case managers are working with individuals and families to meet their continuing needs. The Red Cross will ensure that these families receive the supplies they need, and will refer them to programs offered by other local nonprofit organizations when necessary.
Trained mental health workers are providing emotional support to individuals who have lost loved ones or are otherwise traumatized by their experience during these floods.
The Red Cross continues to work with local officials to monitor these and other disasters, such as the wildfires in western Montana. As these events continue, the Red Cross urges all families in affected areas to register on the Red Cross Safe and Well site, available at http://www.redcross.org. Here, they can leave a message for their loved ones letting them know of their well- being.
The American Red Cross has helped people mobilize to help their neighbors for 125 years. Last year, victims of a record 72,883 disasters, most of them fires, turned to the nearly 1 million volunteers and 35,000 employees of the Red Cross for help and hope. Through more than 800 locally supported chapters, more than 15 million people each year gain the skills they need to prepare for and respond to emergencies in their homes, communities and world. Almost 4 million people give blood -- the gift of life -- through the Red Cross, making it the largest supplier of blood and blood products in the United States. The Red Cross helps thousands of U.S. service members separated from their families by military duty stay connected. As part of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, a global network of more than 180 national societies, the Red Cross helps restore hope and dignity to the world's most vulnerable people. An average of 91 cents of every dollar the Red Cross spends is invested in humanitarian services and programs. The Red Cross is not a government agency; it relies on donations of time, money, and blood to do its work.
American Red Cross
http://www.redcross.org
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