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No Rules Riders Receives Presidential Award !!!!
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These people spray-painted words on the top of their roof in an effort to get help for a diabetic patient. |
He's 11-months-old. He doesn't deserve this. (We need) just first aid," said someone with this baby at the convention center. |
Here is a video clip from a local TV Station showing the Devestation
This article is from FEMA.
Cash Sought To Help Hurricane Victims, Volunteers Should Not Self-Dispatch
Release Date: August 29, 2005
Release Number: HQ-05-177
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Voluntary organizations are seeking cash donations to assist victims of Hurricane Katrina in Gulf Coast states, according to Michael D. Brown, Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Emergency Preparedness and Response. But, volunteers should not report directly to the affected areas unless directed by a voluntary agency.
“Cash donations
are especially helpful to victims,” Brown said. “They 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.”
Volunteer agencies provide a wide variety of services after disasters, such as
clean up, childcare, housing repair, crisis counseling, sheltering and food.
“We’re grateful for the outpouring of support already,” Brown said. “But it’s important that volunteer response is coordinated by the professionals who can direct volunteers with the appropriate skills to the hardest-hit areas where they are needed most. Self-dispatched volunteers and especially sightseers can put themselves and others in harm’s way and hamper rescue efforts.”
Here is a list of phone numbers set up solely for cash donations and/or volunteers.
Donate cash to:
American
Red Cross
1-800-HELP NOW (435-7669) English
1-800-257-7575 Spanish
United
Methodist Committee on Relief
1-800-554-8583
Operation
Blessing
1-800-436-6348
America’s
Second Harvest
1-800-344-8070
Donate Cash to and Volunteer with:
Adventist
Community Services
1-800-381-7171
Catholic
Charities, USA
1-800-919-9338
Christian
Disaster Response
941-956-5183 or 941-551-9554
Christian
Reformed World Relief Committee
1-800-848-5818
Church
World Service
1-800-297-1516
Convoy
of Hope
417-823-8998
Corporation for
National and Community Service Disaster Relief Fund
(202) 606-6718
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
1-800-SAL-ARMY (725-2769)
Southern
Baptist Convention -- Disaster Relief
1-800-462-8657, ext. 6440
For further information: visit the website for the National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (NVOAD) at: http://www.nvoad.org/.
This list of organizations is provided by the National Organization of Voluntary Agencies Active in Disaster. Please email EST-DONATA@dhs.gov if you are interested in having your organization added to the list.
Please check with your
tax advisor or the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
for more information regarding the tax deductibility of your donation.
The listing of or omission of an institution or organization on this Web site
does not refer to programmatic capability nor does it confer any official
status, approval, or endorsement of the institution or organization itself.
This listing does not purport to be a listing of all organizations that are
providing relief in the affected area. Additionally, there may be organizations
providing relief in the affected area that are not accepting donations at this
time. It is not the purpose of this Web site to make, or enable to be made, any
representation to the public concerning the organizations listed. This listing
is for informational purposes only. Any contributions you choose to make from
links on this Web site are at your sole discretion.
FEMA prepares the nation for all hazards and manages federal response and recovery efforts following any national incident. FEMA also initiates mitigation activities, trains first responders, works with state and local emergency managers, and manages the National Flood Insurance Program and the U.S. Fire Administration. FEMA became part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on March 1, 2003.
Last Updated: Wednesday, 31-Aug-2005 14:18:00
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Last Updated on Sunday, 22 January, 2006 @ 09:56:42 -0400
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