Los Angeles Times

Neighbors help Ojai f ire victims

A group of residents have started their own relief effort — from clearing debris to providing hot meals.

- By Nicole Santa Cruz

OJAI — After days of protecting his ranch in the hills above town from the siege of fire, Trevor Quirk and his friend Justin Homze hosted a community meal in the parking lot of an Ojai market.

Someone donated 100 burritos. There were pints of blueberrie­s. Coffee was served. But that was just a start. After the breakfast, Quirk drove around his community of 11 years, delivering food to families. People donated what they had, and before long, his truck was full. Weeks later, that same parking lot is the Upper Ojai Relief Center, a community-led project to help the victims of California’s largest fire in recorded history.

“People are just looking like hell because they’ve been through war,” Quirk said.

In the parking lot of the market, there were bundles of clothing, toys for children, pet food, shovels and sifters, and boxes of food.

Volunteers from all over California and as far as Colorado have helped fire victims cut down trees blocking the driveways to their homes, sifted through ashes to find valuables and helped people replace essential items.

“We are going to help people rebuild their homes,” Quirk said. “We brought this community together, and we’re going to continue to do it.”

On a recent afternoon, Leona Mote, 80, was returning to her destroyed home to check her mail. On her way there, she and her son stopped at the relief center.

Mote lost her husband of 54 years in October. Then she lost the home they had shared in the fire. In the parking lot she met Robin Graham, 61, who was clutching two dolls.

Graham’s childhood home burned down 10 days before Christmas when

she was 11. In the aftermath of the 1967 fire, a Madame Alexander doll gave her comfort. Graham had purchased two of the dolls and came to the center with hopes of gifting them to a girl or two.

Mote overheard Graham and walked over. The dolls were replicas of one her husband had given her years ago. The women wept together.

“So many lives just stopped and are on hold, and people are still reeling from the effects of the fire,” Graham said. “It takes a long time to get your life back together.”

Vicky Manzano, who lives across the street, has cooked meals for the volunteers and people who come by. One day it was tamales, the next it was albondigas, a Mexican meatball soup. Although she doesn’t have any running water and her home is covered in ash, Manzano felt compelled to do what she could.

Dylan Gordon, a 25-yearold photograph­er, and others have assembled crews to help people cut down trees and clear driveways to get back home. They’ve set up temporary shelters for people whose homes burned down and are waiting for insurance settlement­s.

Allen Hurd and his wife, Carol Crosby, moved to Ojai from Los Angeles nearly two decades ago, drawn by the eclectic community and small-town feel. Now they were sorting through donations after losing everything in the fire.

The couple were staying with friends. They’re unsure what’s next. The community spirit was what drew them to Ojai in the first place. That spirit was only reinforced by the tragedy of the Thomas fire.

“You’ve got the gamut of everyone pulling together,” Hurd said.

Peter Deneen flew back to Ojai to visit his family for the holidays but ended up canceling his trip back east to stay and help with the recovery effort. So far, he said, the group is working to find families homes.

Reinhard, a 76-year-old artist and composer who goes by the one name, lost the motor home he slept in, all the tools he uses for his sculptures and an electric piano. Each day, he has come to the station for food or clothing.

“It was actually a shock to see all this help and concern,” he said.

On Christmas Day, a couple drove to the station and donated cash and an electric piano.

The piano was quickly given to Reinhard.

‘So many lives just stopped and are on hold, and people are still reeling from the effects of the fire. It takes a long time to get your life back together.’ — Robin Graham, who brought dolls to share with fire victims

 ?? Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? TREVOR QUIRK, right, high-fives Leona Mote as volunteers sift through the rubble of Mote’s home near Ojai. She lost her husband of 54 years in October, then lost the home they had shared to the Thomas fire.
Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times TREVOR QUIRK, right, high-fives Leona Mote as volunteers sift through the rubble of Mote’s home near Ojai. She lost her husband of 54 years in October, then lost the home they had shared to the Thomas fire.
 ??  ?? VOLUNTEERS organized by Quirk and the grass-roots Upper Ojai Relief Center have turned out in droves to help fire victims.
VOLUNTEERS organized by Quirk and the grass-roots Upper Ojai Relief Center have turned out in droves to help fire victims.
 ?? Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? MANY RESIDENTS of Ojai were first drawn to the town by its community spirit and small-town feel. The fire only reinforced that spirit.
Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times MANY RESIDENTS of Ojai were first drawn to the town by its community spirit and small-town feel. The fire only reinforced that spirit.
 ??  ?? IN THE parking lot of an Ojai market, the grass-roots Upper Ojai Relief Center receives donations of clothing, food, toys and more for victims of the Thomas fire.
IN THE parking lot of an Ojai market, the grass-roots Upper Ojai Relief Center receives donations of clothing, food, toys and more for victims of the Thomas fire.

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