SBC DR ramping up in flood-ravaged Ga.; victims can call ‘800’ number for help
By Mickey Noah
 |
| A 10-person crew of Georgia Baptist volunteers worked all day on Rebecca Cash's home, cleaning out mud and ripping out drywall. and ruined paneling. Photo by Carol Pipes. |
 |
| Everything homeowner Rebecca Cash owned sits in her front yard, waiting to be hauled away. Photo by Carol Pipes. |
ALPHARETTA, Ga. –Thirty-four Southern Baptist disaster relief teams from six different state conventions are already on the scene or en route to assist victims from last week’s historic flooding in Georgia, which resulted in 10 deaths and damages estimated as high as $500 million across the northern half of the state.
An estimated 20,000 homes were damaged and 14 counties have been declared disasters by President Obama. Seventeen counties were declared as disasters by Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue.
To assist Georgia’s thousands of flood victims, a toll-free number, 1-800-460-6881, has been established by the North American Mission Board and the Georgia Baptist Convention to field calls from homeowners needing help to clean up their flooded, mud-filled homes. The call center, staffed by volunteers, is now open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., seven days a week, and will relay requests to Baptist DR recovery teams in the field.
One flood victim was Rebecca Cash, who sat in her carport as Georgia Baptist disaster relief volunteers hauled out water-soaked sheet rock and insulation from her home, which filled with muddy water as floodwaters rose quickly last Monday (Sept. 21).
“I’ve lived here 36 years, and I’ve never seen water come this far up the hill,” said Cash. “It’s just devastating. It might not be a fancy, $300,000 home but it’s everything to me.”
Forsaking church attendance, Sunday dinner at home and NFL football, a 10-person crew of Georgia Baptist volunteers worked all day on Cash’s home, cleaning out mud and ripping out drywall and ruined paneling. The home was stripped down to its studs with the hope of saving it from mold and mildew so Cash can rebuild.
“We just want to help her get back in her home,” said mud-out volunteer Kenneth Bryant of Palmetto, Ga., a disaster relief volunteer since 2001.
NAMB’s disaster operations center – which coordinates disaster response among the 43 Southern Baptist state conventions during major disasters too big for one state to handle on its own – went into full operation on Sat., Sept. 26, at the mission agency’s Alpharetta location.
“Assessing just started Sunday (Sept. 27),” said Mickey Caison, NAMB’s team leader for adult volunteer mobilization. “140 homes have already been identified for projects and we know we’ll have to activate many more units for assessment and recovery.”
In support of the Georgia Baptist Convention’s recovery, chaplain and feeding teams which were first to respond, disaster assessment teams from Alabama and Virginia (VBMB) are en route to Georgia, along with additional recovery teams from Texas Baptist Men, Kentucky, Virginia (SBCV) and Alabama.
The 34 Baptist disaster relief teams are now operating at nine Georgia sites: First Baptist Church-Chattahoochee, Atlanta; West Metro Baptist Association, Lithia Springs; Beulah Baptist Church, Douglasville; First Baptist Church, Powder Springs; First Baptist Church, Austell; Glen Forest Baptist Church, Mableton; First Baptist Church, Summerville; First Baptist Church, Trion; and Ebenezer Baptist Church, Toccoa.
As of Monday (Sept. 28), the Georgia feeding unit at First Baptist-Summerville had already prepared almost 1,000 meals for flood victims and volunteer workers.
The 100-year flood, caused by an estimated 9-12 inches of monsoon-type rainfall last week, ironically follows a two-year drought in the Peach State.
Southern Baptist disaster relief is a ministry of the Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board and 43 state conventions. With 90,000 trained volunteers, Southern Baptist disaster relief operates more than 2,010 mobile units (feeding, chainsaw, mud-out, command, communication, childcare, shower, laundry and water purification.) These units are owned and staffed by SBC churches, state conventions and local associations.
In 2008, SBC disaster relief volunteers responded to 227 natural and man-made disasters (floods, fires, tornadoes, hurricanes, etc.), prepared 8 million meals and repaired or removed debris from more than 12,000 yards – at no charge to homeowners.
Southern Baptist disaster relief partners with the American Red Cross, The Salvation Army, Mercy Medical Airlift, Samaritan’s Purse, FEMA, National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disasters (NVOAD) and state and county emergency operations centers.
More News ... |