October 13, 2006 By Linda Bloom STAMFORD,
Conn. – Three United Methodist community centers on the Gulf Coast — still struggling
to recover from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita as they assist area residents — will
receive additional assistance from the United Methodist Committee on Relief. UMCOR
directors approved the funding during the Oct. 9-12 annual meeting of the United
Methodist Board of Global Ministries, UMCOR's parent agency. The
relief agency also announced the awarding of major grants from the U.S. government
for work in two African countries and the expectation of a $3.4 million grant
from the United Nations Development Program for continuing tsunami-related work
in Indonesia. The Rev. Paul Dirdak, UMCOR's chief executive,
noted that the Gulf Coast community centers, which are owned by the board's Women's
Division and relate to its community and institutional ministries unit, provide
a backbone of support, especially for the poor. "The idea is to bring these institutions
back into social service," he said. Work in Louisiana,
Mississippi At Moore Community House in Biloxi, Miss.,
eight buildings and three playgrounds were destroyed by Katrina. A $392,437 grant
will allow the rebuilding of the child development center, playground and offices.
Child care for children under 5 years old has been identified as a high-priority
unmet need in the area. A $385,992 grant to the denomination's
Louisiana Annual (regional) Conference will allow the expansion of the Dulac Community
Center to house volunteers who come to the area to rebuild after a disaster. Dulac
is an area populated by the Houma Nation, and many homes were damaged or destroyed
by Hurricanes Katrina or Rita. Near the French Quarter
of New Orleans, a $464,008 grant will be used to rehabilitate St. Mark's Community
Center, to provide space for volunteer teams and allow for the start-up of social
service programs as the neighborhood is revived. The
Louisiana Conference also will receive a $200,000 grant from UMCOR to provide
volunteer housing in Slidell and Lake Charles and at the Peoples Community Center
in New Orleans. In Mississippi, the annual conference
plans to use its $300,000 grant to build three storm-resistant multipurpose buildings
adjacent to local churches. The buildings will be used for volunteer housing and
as a distribution center and warehouse for supplies. Frazer Memorial United Methodist
Church in Montgomery, Ala., also is supporting the project. "They're
creating long-term readiness," Dirdak said. Grants approved
to assist in the recovery of Katrina evacuees living outside the region included
$300,000 to the Memphis and Shelby County Community Service Agency; $266,878 to
the Center for Urban Ministries in Birmingham, Ala.; $220,561 to Metro United
Urban Methodist Ministries of San Diego; and $200,000 to the United Methodist
Memphis Conference. Those funds are in addition to an emergency grant of $100,000
that each received earlier. Aid to Asia, Africa
For its tsunami-related relief work in Indonesia, UMCOR
has been negotiating with the United Nations Development Program for a $3.4 million
grant "to improve the capacity of 210 local civil society organizations in 70
villages in Aceh (province) and Nias Island to address the needs of their post-tsunami
communities." Once the U.N. grant is secure, UMCOR will
add nearly $1.8 million of its own tsunami funding to pay personnel costs for
trainers, mentors and evaluators to all 70 villages. "This is the one opportunity
to make a significant difference in Nias," Dirdak told directors. He
also explained to directors that a $1.4 million grant approved last spring for
the rehabilitation of Memorial Park in Banda Aceh, Indonesia, probably would not
be used as circumstances related to the project had changed. The money will remain
in UMCOR's tsunami fund. In addition, directors approved
a $200,000 grant to the UMCOR-NGO Sri Lanka office to provide emergency assistance
to tsunami survivors currently displaced by the conflict there between the government
and Tamil Tigers. UMCOR announced that a donation of
wheat from the U.S. Department of Agriculture has resulted in $4 million to support
farmers and rural residents of the Democratic Republic of Congo. The
U.S. Office of Foreign Assistance is providing a $1 million grant to improve access
to water and sanitation and increase food security in the southern Darfur region
of Sudan. The agency also has received $800,000 from the U.S. State Department
for educational work in another region of Sudan. UMCOR will contribute $200,000
to the project. United Methodist News Service Linda
Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York. |
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Following Hurricane Katrina, a volunteer
work team from South Africa removes debris from outside St. Mark's Community Center
in New Orleans. The center received a grant of $464,008 from the United Methodist
Committee on Relief to be used to finish restoring its facilities and to restart
its social service programs to the neighborhood. At the relief agency's annual
meeting, Oct. 9-12, in Stamford, Conn., grants were also awarded to the Dulac
(La.) Community Center and to the Moore Community Center in Biloxi, Miss. A
UMNS photo courtesy of Louisiana Now! |
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Adut Malek Wul and her children sit
on a woven mat given to them by the United Methodist Committee on Relief to keep
them out of the mud and help lessen their chances of contracting disease. UMCOR
announced at its annual meeting Oct. 9-12 in Stamford, Conn., a $1 million grant
from the U.S. Office of Foreign Assistance to improve access to water and sanitation
and increase food security in the southern Darfur region of Sudan. UMCOR also
announced that a donation of wheat from the U.S. Department of Agriculture has
resulted in $4 million to support farmers and rural residents of the Democratic
Republic of Congo. A UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey, UMCOR. |
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A boy picks his way through streets
clogged with debris following the Dec. 26, 2004 tsunami in Banda Aceh, Indonesia.
At its annual meeting Oct. 9-12 in Stamford, Conn., the United Methodist Committee
on Relief announced it has been negotiating with the United Nations Development
Program for a $3.4 million grant to address the needs of more than 70 communities
in the Aceh province and Nias Island. A UMNS file photo by Mike DuBose.
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