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Thread: Katrina Support Info

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
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    Nascarlotte
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    Exclamation PSA: Katrina Support Info

    Updated 8/30:
    WASHINGTON -- While a variety of government and private agencies are en route to assist victims of Hurricane Katrina, federal officials said Monday people wanting to help should not head to the affected area unless directed by an agency.

    Instead, Michael Brown, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, urged people to make cash contributions to organizations.

    Cash donations "allow volunteer agencies to issue cash vouchers to victims so they can meet their needs. Cash donations also allow agencies to avoid the labor-intensive need to store, sort, pack and distribute donated goods. Donated money prevents, too, the prohibitive cost of air or sea transportation that donated goods require."

    FEMA listed the following agencies as needing cash to assist hurricane victims:

    - American Red Cross, 800-HELP NOW (435-7669) English, 800-257-7575 Spanish.

    - Operation Blessing, 800-436-6348.

    - America's Second Harvest, 800-344-8070.

    - Adventist Community Services, 800-381-7171.

    - Catholic Charities, USA, 703-549-1390.

    - Christian Disaster Response, 941-956-5183 or 941-551-9554.

    - Christian Reformed World Relief Committee, 800-848-5818.

    - Church World Service, 800-297-1516.

    - Convoy of Hope, 417-823-8998.

    - Lutheran Disaster Response, 800-638-3522.

    - Mennonite Disaster Service, 717-859-2210.

    - Nazarene Disaster Response, 888-256-5886.

    - Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, 800-872-3283.

    - Salvation Army, 800-SAL-ARMY (725-2769).

    - Southern Baptist Convention - Disaster Relief, 800-462-8657, ext. 6440.

    - United Methodist Committee on Relief. 800-554-8583.
    Here are some more links

    Red Cross

    Feed the Children

    Salvation Army
    Last edited by mrryde; 08-30-2005 at 07:11 AM.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    Colorado
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    298
    Good luck down there. I hope the predictions are wrong.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
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    2,651

    Its going to get worse before it gets better

    (CNN) -- Hundreds of thousands of refugees from Hurricane Katrina holed up with friends and family across the South probably have one question foremost on their minds: When can I go home?

    Not for a while, disaster officials said Monday, and for some, not for a long time.

    In the meantime, the American Red Cross, a number of businesses and the federal government said they were launching relief efforts.

    The Federal Emergency Management Agency is preparing to house "at least tens of thousands of victims ... for literally months on end," said the agency's director, Michael Brown.

    Lakes and rivers were still spilling over levees late Monday, and "it's going to get worse before it gets better," Brown said.

    Veteran FEMA staff members who have surveyed the destruction report some of the worst damage they have ever seen, he said.

    "This is truly a catastrophic event," Brown said on CNN's "Larry King Live."

    Louisiana and Mississippi officials urged evacuees as well as those stranded by flooding from the storm to stay put.

    "It's too dangerous to come home," said Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco, who ordered state police to block re-entry routes to all but emergency workers. (Full story)

    A Louisiana public health expert described conditions in New Orleans that are probably typical in all the stricken areas:

    "No sewage, no drinking water, contamination, threat of rapid increase in mosquitoes, roads are impassible, downed power lines everywhere, trees, debris from houses in the roads, no way to go shopping, no gas," said Ivor van Heerden, director of the Center for the Study of Public Health Impacts of Hurricanes in Baton Rouge.

    The American Red Cross' relief operation would be the largest in its history, the organization's president, Marty Evans, said on CNN's "Paula Zahn Now" -- larger than for all four of last year's Florida hurricanes combined.

    More than 75,000 people were being housed in nearly 240 shelters across the region, and "we expect that to grow" as people who can't return home seek somewhere to stay, Evans said.

    Baby formula, communications equipment, generators, water and ice are being rushed into hard-hit areas by the federal government, along with doctors, nurses and first-aid supplies, The Associated Press reported.

    Experts to help with search-and-rescue efforts have been dispatched by the Pentagon, the AP said.

    Wal-Mart said it has donated $1 million to the Salvation Army for disaster relief and that more than 80 stores in the Gulf Coast states would help distribute relief goods.

    The home improvement chain Lowe's said it would match customer donations up to $1 million.

    T-Mobile said it was offering Wi-Fi Internet service free of charge at its HotSpot locations in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.

    The HotSpot service is offered at Borders Books and Music, FedEx Kinko's, Starbucks, Hyatt Hotels, Red Roof Inn Motels, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and US Airways clubs and lounges.
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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Posts
    594
    I haven't seen much about this on the major news sites, but there has been a major levee break. Sad, it seems like the levees holding was one of the bright spots. Apparently the lake is filling up the city and this is looking more like the worst case scenario they had feared.

    http://www.nola.com/hurricane/t-p/ka...astrophic.html

    http://www.bayoubuzz.com/articles.aspx?aid=4864

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    MI
    Posts
    4,956

    Post

    Why, why, why, WHY don't people heed the evacuation orders? Now emergency workers are risking THEIR lives to save those that didn't leave.

    The human cost and monetary cost would have been far less had these folks left like they were ordered to.

    On top of that, it's very likely that insurance companies will be inundated with claims, driving the cost of everyone's premiums through the roof.

    I'll donate my blood and prayers but I won't be sending money.
    Balls Deep in the 'Ho

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Location
    West Coast of the East Coast
    Posts
    8,031
    Quote Originally Posted by 13
    Why, why, why, WHY don't people heed the evacuation orders? Now emergency workers are risking THEIR lives to save those that didn't leave.

    The human cost and monetary cost would have been far less had these folks left like they were ordered to.

    On top of that, it's very likely that insurance companies will be inundated with claims, driving the cost of everyone's premiums through the roof.

    I'll donate my blood and prayers but I won't be sending money.
    Boy who cried wolf syndrome. We hear it all the time here. Every storm is the next big one. It is easy to get complacent. That thing was so huge, I don't know how anyone thought staying near the coast was a good idea. But, the thought that a storm could destroy and cripple an entire city is too crazy for most to imagine.

    I pray that nothing like that ever hits the Tampa Bay area. The pictures would make this look small. The entire county I live in is one giant peninsula. A storm like that would wipe us clean. Fucking scary, but also very unlikely. I still will evacuate every time I am told to. That is one gamble I will never take.
    I like living where the Ogdens are high enough so that I'm not everyone's worst problem.- YetiMan

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