by Jennifer Burcham* November
17, 2006 WASHINGTON – Case managers for Katrina Aid Today
assisted nearly 28,800 families – roughly 75,000 people – by the end of October
and continue to open about 1,000 new cases each week. According
to a recent fourth quarter report from Katrina Aid Today, affiliates working on
long-term recovery with survivors of Hurricane Katrina virtually doubled the number
of families helped since its last report in July. "Since
issuing the report, our new total is 30,112 families. That's nearly 80,000 individuals,"
said Warren Harrity, executive director of Katrina Aid Today. "That means we have
served more people than the entire population of the pre-Katrina Lake Charles,
La." Lake Charles had 70,555 residents before the 2005 hurricanes. Katrina
Aid Today is funded through a $66 million grant to the United Methodist Committee
on Relief and monitored by Federal Emergency Management Agency. The consortium
consists of 25 agencies with years of disaster recovery case management experience
serving either as national partners or as local service providers under the Katrina
Aid Today umbrella. Although it has been more than a
year since Hurricane Katrina swept through the Gulf Coast, the figures confirm
that many people across the nation are desperate for aid. The consortium plans
to assist about 70,000 more Katrina-affected families over the next 11 months.
Housing, job training, employment assistance and utility
payments and supplies are the most pressing needs for these families, according
to the report. Health concerns were also on the minds of Katrina survivors as
they sought services from Katrina Aid Today partners. Sharon
Truly, 48, is a Katrina Aid Today client. Though a Louisiana native, she had never
evacuated for a hurricane. When Hurricane Katrina came barreling through New Orleans,
she thought it was just another storm and decided to ride it out at a motel with
her husband, her son and her 21 exotic birds. "In one
day, everything you have in your whole life is wiped out. That fast," Truly said,
with a snap of her fingers, as she looked through photographs of the things she
lost. Truly, who suffers with seizures, migraine headaches,
a chronic respiratory disease and ruptured disks in her back, is unable to work.
She must have oxygen to sleep at night. Her oxygen concentrator was flooded and
she also had trouble getting her prescriptions filled. She eventually relocated
to Memphis, Tenn. That's when she heard about the Memphis
and Shelby County Community Services Agency, a member of Katrina Aid Today. Truly's
case manager helped her find an apartment and furnish it, and get her prescription
medications refilled. The case manager also is helping her map out a plan for
her recovery, and assisted her in applying for an educational grant. Today,
Truly is working toward her bachelor's degree online and plans to start a home-based
business selling vitamins and nutritional shakes. The
consortium has more than 1,400 full-time and volunteer trained disaster recovery
case managers working in 32 states. They help survivors define the things that
are holding them back from rebuilding their lives and then assist them in mapping
out an "action plan for recovery." More information can
be found at http://www.katrinaaidtoday.org/,
the consortium's Web site. United Methodist News Service Jennifer
Burcham is a staff writer for Katrina Aid Today. |
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Hien Nguyen and Bao H. Lee, translators
and case workers for the Vietnamese service organization Boat People SOS, talk
to shrimp fisherman Hung Van Lai at the dock in Biloxi, Miss., about services
they can offer to help. Hung Van Lai and others are still recovering from Hurricane
Katrina, which struck the coast Aug. 29, 2005. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose. |
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Wrecked homes and storm debris line
the streets in New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward more than six months after Hurricane
Katrina ripped through the area. United Methodists expect to be involved in the
Gulf Coast Hurricane recovery work at least until January 2012 as reported at
the April 3-6 meeting of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries. UMCOR
has nearly completed the relief phase of the operations and will begin the long-term
recovery phase on April 17.A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose. | |