San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Balancing COVID with care

Faith-based groups taking precaution­s while providing Ida aid

- By Bob Smietana

In the wake of Hurricane

Ida, faith-based disaster-relief groups are assessing damage, setting up mobile kitchens and preparing to send skilled volunteers to Louisiana, Mississipp­i and other states hit hard by the storm.

Those groups began putting equipment and supplies into place before Ida made landfall last Sunday and have kept in constant contact with church leaders and other volunteers to determine the best places to set up relief operations, given widespread power outages.

As the cleanup began, they have also been mindful that COVID-19 could put all of their work at risk.

“We are taking all the precaution­s we can,” said Sam Porter, national director for Southern Baptist Disaster Relief, adding that Baptist leaders from Louisiana and other states had done the bulk of the planning.

Those precaution­s included splitting up volunteers into smaller groups and housing volunteers from different states in different locations, rather than all together. Volunteers also will wear masks when gathering in groups.

“We don’t want to have positive COVID tests where the whole team has to go home,” Porter said, adding that COVID-19 had already interrupte­d some of the rebuilding efforts from last year’s hurricanes.

Presbyteri­an Disaster Assistance, a ministry of the Presbyteri­an Church (U.S.A), focuses on long-term recovery after natural disasters. The group has been doing rebuilding work in Lake Charles, La., which was hit hard by Hurricanes Lara and Delta in 2020.

The Presbyteri­an volunteers also are required to have vaccines. “The risk of harm to a local community that is still suffering — and the risk of harm to volunteers — is so significan­t that we want to make sure everyone is vaccinated,” said the Rev. Laurie Kraus, director of Presbyteri­an Disaster Assistance.

Much of Louisiana is without power after the storm, making the job more difficult for the Southern Baptist teams, which normally work from churches and other faith institutio­ns. Drinking water and gasoline are also in short supply, according to the Associated Press.

The Southern Baptists nonetheles­s have to set up several large kitchens, aimed at preparing tens of thousands of meals a day, and plan to send in chainsaw teams and crews to help with the cleanup.

Samaritan’s Purse, a North Carolina-based evangelica­l nonprofit, also plans to set up three disaster-relief locations in communitie­s affected by Ida.

“Louisiana was pummeled by Hurricane Ida, and thousands of families are in need of both physical assistance and hope,” said Franklin Graham, president of Samaritan’s Purse. “We are coming alongside these hurting communitie­s to help them start to get back on their feet and remind them of the true hope that can only be found in Jesus Christ.”

Lara Martin, director of the U.S. Disaster Response unit for the United Methodist Committee on Relief, said the first step for local Methodist volunteers is to do damage assessment­s. Once those are done, the local teams invite other Methodists to come in to assist with relief efforts. Methodist relief volunteers will also wear masks and take precaution­s to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

The Louisiana Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church has a strong disasterre­lief group already in place, she said.

Martin added that disaster relief starts long before a storm hits. Training and advance preparatio­n are crucial to any response. “We’re so grateful for the strong partners that we have there in the conference,” she said.

Relief efforts may be needed in other states as well, Martin said, including Mississipp­i and Tennessee, which was already hit with recent catastroph­ic flooding in the town of Waverly, west of Nashville. At least 20 people were killed in flooding in Middle Tennessee last week.

 ?? Brandon Bell / Getty Images ?? The Maldonado family travels by boat to their home after it flooded during Hurricane Ida on Tuesday in Barataria, La. Faith-based groups have begun helping communitie­s hit hard by Ida, but the threat of COVID-19 infections still lingers.
Brandon Bell / Getty Images The Maldonado family travels by boat to their home after it flooded during Hurricane Ida on Tuesday in Barataria, La. Faith-based groups have begun helping communitie­s hit hard by Ida, but the threat of COVID-19 infections still lingers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States