Cape Breton Post

Hurting while healing

Hospital staff displaced by California wildfires

- BY JANIE HAR

For the past week Robert Tierney Jr. has been registerin­g patients at a Northern California hospital in the mornings and checking out possible rentals after work, trying to count his blessings even though his house is one of the more than 1,000 destroyed in a deadly wildfire.

Tierney is among dozens of staff members, including doctors, nurses and others, at Dignity Health Mercy Medical Center in Redding keeping the hospital running despite losing their homes to the flames.

Tierney, 57, choked up briefly as he recalled the moment he learned from a kid on a bicycle that his house and belongings were gone, save for a wedding dress and several hampers of clothes he grabbed before leaving his neighbourh­ood 225 miles (360 kilometres) north of San Francisco.

“I have to come to work. My wife is disabled and I have to make a living and I have a terrific job and it is my pleasure to be here, so I’m just real fortunate I have a job to come to at a time like this,” he said Thursday.

Mike Mangas, spokesman for Dignity Health North State, said 67 staff and volunteers at the hospital are without permanent shelter, their homes destroyed or too damaged to occupy.

“It’s been amazing,” he said. “There have been people sleeping on the floor at the hospital, people sleeping at relatives’, or in hotels if they can get them.”

For many California­ns, wildfire season has turned into a series of upheavals that starts with terror of approachin­g flames. The experience soon gives way to an anxious scramble for shelter, followed by tedious but tense days of waiting.

Police officers, physicians and emergency staff often don’t get much time to grieve as they deal with the chaos of evacuation­s and danger. The police chief in Redding and a sheriff’s deputy in Sonoma County are

among those working in the wake of the sixth-most destructiv­e fire in California history that killed six.

The damage to the region is so severe - roads are blocked by downed power poles, bridges are damaged and fires continue to burn - that more than 20,000 evacuees still have not been allowed to return to their homes.

“I think the biggest issue is the infrastruc­ture damage is horrendous,” said Ken Pimlott, California’s top fire official.

So evacuees wait, often relying on the kindness of strangers, friends and relatives.

A young couple set up a gas grill on a Redding street corner and handed out hot dogs and hamburgers to victims. After

a local radio station broadcast the couple’s good deed, the intersecti­on soon turned into an impromptu gathering spot for evacuees and donations of additional grills, volunteers and food showed up.

Many worry when things will return to normal.

With the first day of school fast approachin­g, 16-year-old Samantha Barber has no idea where she will be living when her senior year starts on Aug. 15.

Barber and her mother were barred from returning to their home in tiny French Gulch last month and spent the first five nights in a hotel. They moved on to sharing a spare bedroom in a relative’s home.

“We pretty much had the

clothes that were on our back,” said Barber. “It’s just breathtaki­ng not being able to get anything, having to wash your clothes every night and go out and get laundry soap and have to buy dinner every night.”

Some residents who were spared from the destructio­n took in evacuees’ pets and livestock while offering recreation­al vehicles and spare bedrooms.

Carla DeLauder, 47, said she learned Thursday that roads to her Redding home are open. But her utility can’t verify whether power is back and she can’t risk a five-hour drive from where she and her husband are staying with the nine dogs and cats she grabbed when they fled a week ago.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Robert Tierney Jr., right, a patient registrati­on specialist at Mercy Medical Center, who lost his home in the recent fires, receives a message from Dignity Health North State’s spokesman Mike Mangas, left, that a citizen wants to offer him a place to...
AP PHOTO Robert Tierney Jr., right, a patient registrati­on specialist at Mercy Medical Center, who lost his home in the recent fires, receives a message from Dignity Health North State’s spokesman Mike Mangas, left, that a citizen wants to offer him a place to...

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