San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

HARROWING STORIES OF LOSS BEHIND DONATION CAMPAIGNS

Within 24 hours of Valley fire’s start, Gofundme appeals popped up to help victims who have lost everything

- BY PAM KRAGEN

Within 24 hours of the start of the Valley fire on Saturday afternoon, fundraisin­g appeals for fire victims started popping up on the crowdfundi­ng website Gofundme.com.

Launched mostly by family members and friends of evacuees who lost their homes and belongings in the Jamul and Alpine areas, the online appeals detail the families’ losses and their often-harrowing escapes from the flames. The appeals range from a $7,000 campaign for a rancher who is roughing it with her rescue horses on her burnt property to a $70,000 campaign for a retired Navy veteran and his wife of 21 years who are starting over from scratch.

Fortunatel­y for these and other victims, donors are responding in a big way.

The following are interviews and excerpts from several Valley fire campaigns that have been verified as legitimate by Gofundme’s Trust & Safety team. The titles for each campaign below can be searched to find the individual accounts.

Help Blake rebuild his home from the CA wildfire

In the 20 or so years the Campos family has lived in the Jamul area, they’ve seen their share of wildfires. But nothing compares to the blaze that wrapped itself around their 40acre Lawson Valley property on Saturday, said Brooke Campos, who owns the land with her father, Eddie Campos, and her brother, Blake Campos.

The family and farm employees fought the fire for as long as they could before evacuating Saturday night. They rescued their neighbor’s horses, dogs and chickens but were forced to leave behind their stubborn pig, Bruce. Bruce survived the blaze but his pen did not. Neither did Blake’s house or most of the $500,000 farming business that

the family launched last fall. Because of the ranch’s rural, fire-prone location, Brooke said her family had been turned down four times in recent months for property insurance.

The Campos family purchased the land in 2016 to build their No Boundaries Farm, a federally licensed hemp-growing operation. The fall crop in the ground now survived the flames, but almost everything else was lost, including the barn that housed the company’s offices, a plant-cloning lab, indoor grow rooms and lighting, rolling, drying and trimming areas and all the inventory and merchandis­e from their new CBD jarred product line. Blake’s home, where he lived with his girlfriend and a roommate, was also destroyed.

“The only thing Blake has left is a pair of shoes, a pair of sandals and a couple changes of clothes,” Brooke Campos said.

The Campos family is now living together in Eddie’s small home and trying to figure out how to recover. Brooke said that despite the devastatio­n, it’s hard to imagine ever leaving the area.

“When everything happened, my first thought was I can’t do this anymore,” she said. “But when you live out in Jamul, it’s a lifestyle. Being surrounded by Mother Nature, the quietness of being in the mountains ... It’s a home to us.”

On Tuesday, Brooke launched two campaigns on Gofundme. The first is to buy Blake and his girlfriend a fifth-wheel trailer they can park on the land as their new home. The second campaign is for rebuilding the farm. As of Friday evening, the Blake house campaign’s 161 donors had raised $18,781 of a $20,000 goal. Visit: gofundme.com/f/24pyhh5lk0. And the No Boundaries Farm Rebuild campaign’s 59 donors had contribute­d $6,270 toward a $100,000 goal. Visit: gofundme.com/f/ no-boundaries-farm-rebuild

Dewey & Anabel lost everything in CA wildfire

On Sunday, Jason Vicks of Baltimore launched a campaign for his uncle Dewey Bratcher and Dewey’s wife, Anabel, who lost their Jamul home and all five of their cats in the blaze. The couple, along with Anabel’s mother, Lupe, who lives with them, weren’t home when the fire swept through on Saturday.

Bratcher is a 22-year Navy veteran, a stand-up comedian, high school baseball umpire, father of three and a new grandfathe­r. Anabel has worked for Kaiser Permanente for 35 years. The loss of their home came just a few weeks after they lost their oldest child, Adan, to cancer.

In a Facebook post on Sunday, Bratcher wrote that he was trying to not be embarrasse­d about the Gofundme campaign and teaching himself to just “embrace good things.” And when the fund was already nearing its goal on Wednesday, he posted a note thanking the public for their generosity.

“There are no words. There are none in the entirety of the English language that can express our gratitude for what each of you are doing or have done,” Bratcher wrote. “Please know that what you have done will resonate for a long time and, like the clanging of a bell or the tossing of a stone into a lake, the ripple effect will go on and on and on.”

The campaign was created to raise money for the supplies the Bratchers will need to start over, such as clothing, linens, cookware, furniture and a new place to live while their home is rebuilt.

As of Friday evening, 899 donors had contribute­d $66,950 toward a $70,000 goal. Visit: gofundme.com/f/ dewey-amp-anabel-losteveryt­hing-in-ca-wildfire

Valley Fire destroyed his house & everything

On Tuesday, Robert Anderson launched a campaign for his friend Jesus Mendoza, a 42-year-old treetrimme­r who lost his home, truck, car and all of the equipment he uses for his gardening business.

Mendoza lived in a motor home on a widow’s property in Alpine, where he also stored all of his tree-trimming equipment. When the fire began Saturday afternoon, Anderson said he and another friend rushed to help Mendoza evacuate. But Anderson said that when they arrived at the property, Mendoza wanted them to focus their efforts instead on helping the widow pack up her valuables, her dog and her chickens.

By the time she left, the fire was just over the hill and fire crews were already staging on the property to save the house. Mendoza didn’t have time to collect any of his own gear before he was forced to leave. Although the property owner’s home was saved, everything Mendoza owned was lost. Anderson decided to launch the campaign without initially telling Mendoza because he said his friend isn’t the type to think of himself. But Anderson said Mendoza deserves the support from the community.

“He is a very honorable person and will give the shirt off his back to help anyone out there,” Anderson said.

As of Friday evening, 103 donors had contribute­d $8,865 toward Anderson’s $10,000 goal. Visit: gofundme.com/f/valley-firedestro­yed-his-house-ampeveryth­ing

Shelley Brown’s house destroyed by fire

Not long before the Valley fire swept through her property, Shelley Brown had signed the purchase agreement for the house on Lawson Valley Road where she’d lived for seven years. She had also just adopted five rescue horses.

The fire came over the hill to her land so quickly Saturday

afternoon, the only thing Brown had time to do to save her horses was open up their stalls and let them run free. But everything else that she owned, including all the stored product inventory for her online sales business, went up in smoke, according to her close friend Shannon Clark.

“The only thing she salvaged was her son’s baby book and her ex-husband’s baby book,” Clark said.

Over the weekend, Brown was able to round up her horses and take them back to her property, where she has been staying with them ever since, sleeping in her car. The property has no electricit­y or running water. A Gofundme campaign launched Monday by Clark’s daughter, Sierra Noriega, is raising money for the supplies Brown and her horses will need to survive on the land, including a gas-run generator, a water pump for the well, water hoses for the horse pens and basic living necessitie­s.

“She’s a really simple person. She doesn’t ask for much. But Shelley’s animals are her life,” Clark said. “At this point, she doesn’t know what she’ll do.”

As of Friday evening, 18 donors had contribute­d $1,187 toward the fund’s $7,000 goal. Visit: gofundme.com/f/24pymdwflc

Irving and Anita Beeman lost home in Valley fire

Two campaigns have been started on behalf of Irving and Anita Beeman, who lost their Jamul home in the fire. The couple were able to grab some mementos, clothes, a car and trailer before fleeing the flames, but everything else was lost, according to their friend Kari Coronado. They are now staying with a friend, but donations are being collected to help the Beemans rent a place to live until they can rebuild.

As of Friday evening, 97 donors to the Beemans’ “fire fund” campaign had raised $8,545 of a $25,000 goal. Visit: gofundme.com/f/irving-andanita-beeman-fire-fund. And the “lost home” campaign had raised $6,590 from 43 donors toward a $10,000 goal by Friday. Visit: gofundme.com/f/irving-andanita-beeman-lost-homein-valley-fire

Help Eileen Menzies rebuild

Mandy

Sullivan

launched a campaign on Monday on behalf of her grandmothe­r Eileen Menzies Gram, 78, who lost her Jamul ranch, all of her possession­s and several of her animals in the fire.

In an interview on 10News, Menzies said wildfires had come within a halfmile of her home before, but she had a feeling this one was going to be the one that would “take me out.” As her son, Pat, drove her away from her home of 17 years with her four dogs, Menzies told 10News she didn’t see any firefighte­rs or waterdropp­ing helicopter­s between the flames and her home so she knew her home was doomed.

When she returned the next day, her worst fears were realized. Some of her outdoor animal pens remained intact but some of the animals they housed succumbed to the smoke and flames, including goats, peacocks and a turkey. Fortunatel­y, Menzies’ home was insured and she will rebuild, but the loss of her pets and possession­s has left her devastated.

“You constantly turn into new chapters of your life. At 78, you start over,” she said.

As of Friday evening, 131 donors had contribute­d $11,435 toward a $15,000 goal. Visit: gofundme.com/f/helpeileen-menzies-rebuild

Kimberlee House Fire

On Sunday, Donna Jones launched a fundraiser for her friend Kimberlee Leslie, a single mother of two who lost her Jamul home and all its contents. Leslie could not be reached for comment, but one donor mentioned being moved to give to the campaign because Leslie is a generous person who had donated her own artwork to fundraiser­s for others.

As of Friday evening 103 donors had contribute­d $11,261 toward a $30,000 goal. Visit: gofundme.com/f/kimberlee-house-fire

How to help California wildfire victims and others

Because of the high volume of Gofundme accounts launched in the past two weeks for California wildfire victims, the company has created a central hub for verified individual accounts at gofundme.com/c/act/california-wildfires. The company has also launched a charitable campaign of its own for fire victims in California, Oregon Washington and Colorado at gofundme.com/f/ wildfirere­lieffund.

pam.kragen@sduniontri­bune.com

 ?? COURTESY OF BROOKE CAMPOS ?? Brooke Campos (left to right), her father, Eddie Campos, and her brother, Blake Campos, survey the damage at their 40-acre ranch in Jamul on Monday. Their farming business and one of two homes on the property were lost to the Valley fire on Saturday.
COURTESY OF BROOKE CAMPOS Brooke Campos (left to right), her father, Eddie Campos, and her brother, Blake Campos, survey the damage at their 40-acre ranch in Jamul on Monday. Their farming business and one of two homes on the property were lost to the Valley fire on Saturday.
 ?? COURTESY OF BROOKE CAMPOS ?? A glass jar used for the CBD products made by No Boundaries Farm in Jamul lies among the ruins on the 40-acre property.
COURTESY OF BROOKE CAMPOS A glass jar used for the CBD products made by No Boundaries Farm in Jamul lies among the ruins on the 40-acre property.

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