Subscribe TODAY!
Find out how to advertise with Western Recorder
Put your Church Newsletter on our back page! Learn more about Western Recorder
Return to Home Page
Friday
September 5, 2008

RECENT NATION ARTICLES
Calif. court reverses home school decision

Baptists to aid first responders at Democratic convention

Unchurched Americans may be attending worship

Midwestern floods trigger multiple-state relief efforts

By Mickey Noah
SBC North American Mission Board

Alpharetta, Ga. (BP)—Midwesterners impacted by the historic flooding in the region are calling the disaster “our Katrina” and, as in the hurricane’s aftermath, Southern Baptists are quickly mobilizing to feed thousands displaced by the floodwaters.

Mickey Caison, operations manager for the North American Mission Board’s disaster operations center in Alpharetta, Ga., said the Midwestern floods have been designated as a “multi-state event” and that the center’s staff—already working 16-hour days—is ready to shift to around-the-clock mode.

For Iowa alone, Caison noted that the NAMB disaster relief center fielded a request from June 17 FEMA and the American Red Cross to prepare, cook and distribute 100,000 meals.

Six Southern Baptist feeding units with supporting staff have been deployed to Iowa, the hardest hit area in the Midwest so far, and those units will be preparing the meals. They are located in Cedar Falls, Wapello, Davenport, Iowa City and Cedar Rapids. Also deployed to the Iowa cities are shower units for both flood victims and volunteers.

“We’re hearing from our affected state disaster relief directors that the floodwaters are already worse than the 1993 floods in Iowa, Indiana and Wisconsin,” Caison indicated. Those were described as “500-year” floods at the time.

“Folks affected in the Midwest have told me this is their Hurricane Katrina,” he added. “The number of states, counties and people affected is growing every day.”

Terry Henderson, NAMB’s national disaster relief director, said the flood area is larger than that caused by Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in August 2005.

“In the last 500 years, water had never flooded Des Moines, yet Des Moines had eight inches of water in the downtown area,” he noted, adding that 66 counties have flooded in Iowa and another 44 in Indiana.

According to FEMA, an estimated 11 million Midwesterners have been or will be impacted by the flooding and the tornadoes that have accompanied the storms.

Some 9,000-10,000 residents of Davenport, Iowa, were scheduled to be evacuated June 16 as floodwaters continued to flow southward toward Missouri, Henderson said.

Another 500 to 600 homes have already been ordered to evacuate in Cedar Rapids. Dave Miller, administrator of Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management, told CNN that in all, some 36,000 Iowans, mostly in Cedar Rapids, have evacuated their homes.




HIGH-WATER MARK The city hall and county courthouse in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, were under water June 13 after the nearby Cedar River overflowed its banks. The flood has displaced thousands of residents throughout Iowa and officials expect flood levels to reach or exceed the historic 1993 flood. (BP photo by Jeff Wheeler)

Kentucky relief teams ‘on alert’

Franklin, Ind.—As Kentucky Baptist disaster relief teams continue providing aid to flood-stricken areas in Indiana, volunteers remain “on alert” while historic flooding continues to devastate much of Iowa, according to Kentucky Baptist Convention disaster relief associate Coy Webb.

Two Kentucky teams arrived in Indiana last weekend to assist with mud-out efforts. A team of six volunteers from Elizabethtown will serve until June 27, and six volunteers from Christian County will serve until June 28.

The KBC had recently sent 19 volunteers to Franklin, Ind., Webb said, but those teams are now finished.

“We are being asked to continue serving in Indiana, but we’ll be ready to help in Iowa once the water begins to recede,” Webb noted, adding that NAMB is sending volunteers from other states to provide immediate relief in Iowa.

“There are going to be tremendous needs in Iowa,” he emphasized.

Webb said he has heard estimates that as much as 83 percent of Iowa is flooded. Officials from NAMB predicted that it could be as long as two weeks before the floodwaters recede.

At that time, Kentucky Baptist disaster relief teams likely will be called upon to do mud-out work, staff feeding teams and kitchen and shower units, as well as provide chaplaincy support, Webb indicated.

Meanwhile, a shower unit belonging to Christian County Baptist Association was destroyed June 15 while en route to Iowa. Two volunteers from Hopkinsville were pulling the unit in a trailer along an Illinois highway when high winds from a thunderstorm spun the truck around, dislodging the trailer and sending it rolling. The men were not injured in the accident, but the shower unit was totaled.

Webb said that while crews are not needed on site just yet, churches and individuals can still help with financial gifts given through NAMB or the KBC.

“They’re saying that the damage is (Hurricane) Katrina-like and financial needs are going to be similar to Katrina,” he added.

In the meantime, he urged trained disaster relief volunteers to be ready to help when the time comes.

“We are on alert and we are anticipating Kentucky teams to be needed in the coming weeks.”


Meanwhile, the flooding in Central Indiana below Indianapolis two weeks ago was that state’s worst since 1913, according to reports.

While feeding operations continue in Indiana, mud-out operations have been fewer than anticipated because local citizens have done much of their own mud-out work, Caison indicated.

But mud-out operations are not under way in Iowa yet because the water either has crested or continues to rise in various parts of the state, he noted.

“Historically, for every day the water comes in and the floodwaters rise, it takes two days for it to go down,” Caison explained. “So we have to wait for the water to come in and go down before we can begin to get mud-out units in.

“Because of the levees breaking in Iowa, we’re also moving into areas that were not expected to be flooded. So the needs and where we need to be are changing every hour,” he added.

Like the Southern Baptist response in New Orleans—which still continues—Henderson said the response by Baptist mud-out and chainsaw teams in Iowa could span many months. “It’s going to be a long-term process,” he said.

According to NAMB’s disaster relief center, feeding, shower, and recovery units are located in the Indiana cities of Terre Haute, West Terre Haute, Franklin, New Whiteland and Bloomfield.

Disaster units (feeding, recovery, shower and chaplains) in Wisconsin include those in Reedsburg, Gays Mills and Muscoda.


Western Recorder issue date: June 24, 2008



Questions? Contact our Webmaster.

© 2008 The Western Recorder. All rights reserved.
Mailing Address: Box 43969  •  Louisville, KY 40253
Street Address: 13420 Eastpoint Centre Drive  •  Louisville, KY 40223
(866) 489-3422 (News)  •  (502) 489-3443 (Circulation)
(502) 489-3535 (General)  •  (502) 489-3565 (FAX)