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Here is some information about Utah churches donating and helping the victims.

Utah churches are going extra mile in relief efforts

Utah's faith communities are working with national religious and secular organizations to ship relief supplies, collect funding, organize feeding and cleanup teams and to pray for the tens of thousands of people devastated by Hurricane Katrina.

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At the Bishop's Central Storehouse in Salt Lake City, warehouseman Charles Christensen loads supplies on a truck to be sent to states affected by Katrina.

Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News
Meanwhile, LDS officials on the ground in the Southeast still hope to account for some of their missing members.

Fourteen semitrailer truck loads of ready-to-eat food, water, sleeping bags and tents have left Salt Lake City from the Bishop's Storehouse of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, some of them as early as last Sunday. Additional containers were being loaded Wednesday afternoon for immediate shipment.

Kevin Nield, director of Bishops' Storehouse Services, told reporters that areas of coastal Louisiana and Mississippi appear to be hardest hit, and the supplies being shipped there are in addition to food, water and other items that were pre-positioned at the church's storehouses around the region

LDS Church spokesman Dale Bills said several LDS church buildings, including those in Alexandria, La., as well as Jackson and Hattiesburg, Miss., are being used as emergency shelters to house those displaced by the storms, and they will also serve as distribution points for LDS relief supplies.

LDS missionaries were evacuated from the areas hit by the storm last weekend, and all are accounted for, he said.

Bennie O. Lilly, area welfare manager for the LDS Church's North American Southeast Area, told the Deseret Morning News via satellite phone from the church's storehouse in Slidell, La., which is serving as the primary distribution point for relief supplies. He said that in southern Louisiana and Mississippi the devastation is so widespread that local church leaders have been unable to account for all of their members there.

From 5,000 to 10,000 Latter-day Saints live in the affected areas, and with communication systems down, accounting for everyone is difficult, he said.

Lilly said local church leaders are responding to the needs of their congregations as well as can be expected at this point, but many face major challenges in dealing with their personal losses and circumstances. For example, President Barry Griggs of the Gulfport, Miss., stake reported in his first contact with regional leaders that his home had been destroyed.

"He was headed in his car toward North Carolina to drop off his wife," who has some health problems and needed to be evacuated. "Then he'll turn around and come back to the devastation of his own situation, in addition to trying to meet the needs of members in that area. When your home is destroyed, there's just so much you can do."

Communications in the area at this point are tenuous at best, Lillie said, illustrated by the fact that his satellite phone lost contact five different times during a 10-minute conversation with the newspaper. Still, he is grateful to have the equipment, which has also been used by local police and fire agencies in the immediate area. With spotty phone communication, "we just have to capture the information coming and going as fast as we can before we lose the signal."

A bishop from the church's Picayune, Miss., area was at the storehouse with Lillie to pick up a load of relief supplies for the members of his congregation, but phone service was lost before he was able to relay information to the newspaper about conditions in his area.

Other faith groups are also involved in a variety of ways.

Wade Gaylor, disaster relief director for the Southern Baptist Utah-Idaho Convention, said his organization is coordinating with the national Southern Baptist Convention to help provide equipment and manpower. Two trucks have already been flown from Salt Lake City to Shreveport, La., one of them to be used by the Southern Baptist Convention's national relief director to assess damage and direct relief efforts.

A local couple has been dispatched with the other truck to work in the convention's disaster center in Alpharetta, Ga., for about a week to help coordinate disaster response.

Nationally, the Red Cross has asked Southern Baptists to help prepare 500,000 meals per day for the next 90 days, Gaylor said. "We have an agreement with the national Red Cross — they provide us with the food, we prepare it and they serve it. Southern Baptists actually cook about 90 percent of the food the Red Cross serves."

As part of that effort, local feeding teams of 15-20 people each will be dispatched in the next three weeks to work with the Red Cross. Gaylor said a few opt to take their own RVs, but most will simply drive to the area and work out of existing Southern Baptist churches.

Gaylor is also coordinating the deployment of feeding units and cleanup and recovery units — including portable showers, washers and dryers — that will be dispatched from Utah and Idaho in the next few weeks. Coordinators from the national convention are on the ground with satellite phones and communicating the needs with the national relief offices in Atlanta, which then requests help from the state conventions.

Local Baptist churches will also be making quilts to be sent out with the feeding and cleanup units when they leave Utah, he said. Donations are being requested to help fund the local relief efforts and can be made by calling Norma Fox at 801-572-5350. Checks may also be mailed to the Southern Baptist Utah-Idaho Convention, 12401 S. 450 East #G1, Draper, UT 84020, made out to that organization.

Local Baptist churches will also be praying for those who have been affected, Gaylor said. "Right now they just need a lot of prayer. People are seriously in chaos out there right now and need a lot of prayer."

Pastor Greg Johnson, director of a group of local evangelical churches called Standing Together, said many of them are calling on their members to donate money for relief through the Christian Emergency Network (CEN) — www.christianemergencynetwork.com — or the local Salvation Army. On Wednesday, he e-mailed members of the group, encouraging them to pray for the victims and their challenges and to take a special offering that would be channeled either through their own denominational channels or through CEN or the local Salvation Army.

As of Wednesday afternoon, First Church of the Nazarene and Valley Assembly of God were planning to seek donations and offer prayers. Standing Together will also be making a donation through CEN in the name of local Utah evangelical churches, Johnson said, and everyone interested is encouraged to participate with the World Prayer Team in praying for relief. See www.worldprayerteam.org.

The Rev. Dan Webster, spokesman for the Episcopal Diocese of Utah, said donations are being solicited through the national Episcopal Relief and Development organization, and a link to that organization can be reached through the diocesan Web site at www.episcopal-ut.org.

"They've been preparing for several days to work with the outreach ministries of Episcopal dioceses along the coast of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida, and they're ready to move forward." He said Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold of the the Episcopal Church USA is forwarding a letter to be read in all parishes on Sunday talking about the relief effort and asking for help.

Planning is under way for a local diocesan response, which may include a call for prayer for those in the affected areas, and could include fund-raising. In other areas of the country, the Episcopal Foundation of Texas voted to send an emergency grant of $50,000 to both the Dioceses of Louisiana and Mississippi, and the Diocese of Texas hopes to raise $100,000 this Sunday from its 158 congregations.

Rabbi Tracee Rosen of Congregation Kol Ami said Utah's Jewish community will try to come up with some type of response in the coming days once assessment has been done and they are able to determine the most appropriate way to respond.

"We want to make sure our donations are channeled to give as much direct help as possible." No special prayer services are planned, but "we will be making special mention of the folks down there. A number of people in our congregation have relatives that have been affected."

Though calls to spokespersons for the Catholic Diocese of Salt Lake City had yet to be returned at press time, the diocese is one of 195 throughout the country that will be asked to participate in a National Collection for Hurricane Relief, announced Wednesday by Bishop William S. Skylstad, president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

"Catholic Charities USA, working with the local diocesan Catholic Charities, has a professional and well-de- veloped system of reviewing the needs and providing help where it can accomplish the most good." Diocesan collections and individual donations can be sent to the 2005 Hurricane Relief Fund, Catholic Charities USA, P.O. Box 25168, Alexandria, VA 22313-9788.



3 posted on 09/01/2005 11:00:43 PM PDT by Utah Girl ("Keep your face to the sunshine & you cannot see the shadows" ~Helen Keller)
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LDS duo haul aid to victims

SLIDELL, La. — Benny Lillie and Rick Long of the LDS Church's Welfare Services Emergency Response team left Salt Lake City for the Gulf Coast on Monday; by Wednesday they were in the thick of Hurricane Katrina's swath of disaster, methodically visiting town after town to deliver goods — and offering help and hope.

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Volunteers from Bay St. Louis Emergency Management Agency rescue a family from the roof of their suburban in Bay St. Louis, Miss.

Ben Sklar, Associated Press
Lillie and Long headed first to Dallas, Texas, where they loaded a pickup with supplies and followed a semi filled with cots, sleeping bags, generators, tarps and chain saws as it made its way east, stopping at shelters along the way.

One of their first stops was in Alexandria, La., to which about 200 people from New Orleans had been evacuated. Among them were Marbely Barahona with her 11-month-old son, Jared.

Jared rolled on the floor of the Alexandria LDS stake meetinghouse with his shirt off, entertaining refugees of all ages who had just eaten breakfast. Barahona said the stake president had asked them to evacuate before the storm. It was a notification system that Scott N. Conlin, president of the New Orleans Louisiana Stake, had automated earlier. His telephone message was sent by computer to each family in the stake, and all but about seven families elected to leave.

Marbely's neighbors who didn't leave were forced to the rooftops after a levee was sliced by wind-driven waters and Lake Pontchartrain waters flooded 80 percent of the low-lying New Orleans area with from 2 to 20 feet of water.

Area LDS Church officials said most meetinghouses escaped serious damage, but several in the New Orleans area are expected to have sustained serious damage. LDS missionaries were evacuated two days before the storm arrived.

Lillie and Long continued their trail of relief to Baton Rouge, where other residents of New Orleans had found refuge. Two of these were Jacob and Johanna Tolpi of Chalmette, a parish that took the brunt of the storm.

Owners of two well-kept sorrel-colored hounds, the Tolpis elected to face the storm rather than abandon their dogs. They waited in a nearby hotel, where the windows were soon blown out. The wind pounded away so fiercely that it changed the direction of the river's current, Jacob Tolpi said.

"Every tree was blown down, every window was broken," he said. As the wind howled, the hounds yelped and barked. "It was pretty scary," he said.

After the storm, they fled the city on a nearly empty tank of gas in their SUV, finding refuge in Baton Rouge.

Lillie and Long then stopped in Hammond, La., where the storm had damaged the homes of several LDS members and where the tarps they delivered were soon put to use over damaged roofs.

Their next stop was Slidell, northeast of New Orleans, which also faced hurricane winds of 140-160 miles per hour. A checkpoint on I-12 blocked traffic into Slidell, but officers allowed the relief supplies in.

Broken trees lay everywhere — tall, loblolly pine snapped half way up and stately, ancient live oak and pin oak, whose strength kept them intact, only to be betrayed by their shallow root systems. Snapped power poles lay shattered in the streets, connected by a spaghetti of cable. With all the power and telephones out, danger from the powerlines was minimal.

Lillie sent Long to Mississippi, where reports had been received of trees strewn across the countryside. Because of looters, the Mississippi Highway Patrol sealed the borders and it wasn't known if Long made it through.

Regardless, said Lillie, trucks from Orlando, Fla., and Atlanta, Ga., will be headed their way today with more supplies and equipment.

He said the truck from Dallas they followed unloaded at a storehouse in Slidell. Then, reloaded with commodities, it returned to each site.

Meanwhile, the disaster was reaching new crisis points in other areas.

Even as leaders of Louisiana's Jefferson Parish pleaded on the radio for supplies, begging for food for refugees, medical aid and help from law enforcement, I-10 at dusk was a miles-long caravan of yellow blinking lights as service vehicles from other states filled both lanes. Some carried heavy equipment, some tree equipment, some components of one kind or another.

They rumbled forward, people intent on helping however they could.



4 posted on 09/01/2005 11:02:28 PM PDT by Utah Girl ("Keep your face to the sunshine & you cannot see the shadows" ~Helen Keller)
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