Volunteers are needed to help with Long-Term Recovery

There are plenty of opportunities to be involved in the long-term recovery following Hurricane Helene right here in South Carolina. Organize a service trip or a day of volunteering to help with domestic disaster recovery.
Contact Kelli Fulmer via email at kelli@ldrcarolinas.org or phone 803-271-5507 for information about sending volunteer groups to South Carolina affected areas. Depending on your skills, work may include lawn cleanup and landscaping, river and trail cleanup, debris removal, general home repair and rebuilding, cooking, sorting donations, and heavy equipment operation. Skilled workers are also needed for electrical, plumbing, and HVAC work.
We are no longer collecting kits, but we welcome donations of gift cards to Walmart, Lowe’s, Amazon, or Home Depot. Those will be used to purchase tools, supplies, and building materials. Please send them to LDR Carolinas at 1988 Lutheran Synod Drive, Salisbury NC 28144.
If you know individuals or families with damage or other unmet needs due to Helene, please encourage them to contact Kelli Fulmer.

MENTAL EMOTIONAL SPIRITUAL SUPPORT TRAINING
Free Two-Day Disaster Training for Clergy and Lay Leaders
In-person in Arden, NC, Monday, September 8, through Wednesday, September 10, 2025.
Financial assistance is available from LDR Carolinas for travel expenses if needed.
Please contact Ruth Ann Sipe (ruthann@ldrcarolinas.org) for more information.
Seating is limited. Register by Friday, August 8, 2025.
The North and South Carolina Synods, in collaboration with Lutheran Disaster Response, are excited to offer Mental, Emotional, and Spiritual Support (MESS) disaster training for clergy and lay leaders. This program is designed to give church leaders the skills needed to respond to a disaster in both stabilizing (immediate, short-term need following a disaster) and
support (long-term need weeks, months, or years after an event) roles.
For more information or questions, please contact Ruth Ann Sipe.
Register online using this link or via the QR code below:

Ruth Ann reported to the NC Synod at their recent assembly at the Koury Center in Greensboro:

Two years ago, my husband Ray and I began a shared call as the coordinators for LDR Carolinas, funded primarily by a grant from Lutheran Disaster Response. Our primary tasks were to encourage preparedness and to develop a network of individuals and congregations prepared to respond when a disaster occurred in North or South Carolina.
We chose Psalm 46 as a scripture basis for our work:
1God is our refuge and strength,
a very presenthelp in trouble.
2 Therefore we will not fear,
though the earth should change,
though the mountains shake in the heart of the sea,
3 though its waters roar and foam,
though the mountains tremble with its tumult.
That passage reminds us what we are ALL called – as God’s people – to do when the earth changes, the mountains shake, and the waters roar: to claim God’s presence and help in all circumstances. And to be signs of God’s loving presence through our work.
During the past two years, Ray and I have responded to several local disasters across both states – including an EF 3 tornado in Rocky Mount, a severe hailstorm in Rock Hill SC, severe flooding in Brunswick County due to the “No-Name” Storm, and a deadly police shooting in Charlotte.
In each case, we have worked closely with nearby congregations to help them respond by sharing God’s love to their community in need. Short term solidarity grants from Lutheran Disaster Response have enabled us to support communities when these local disasters occurred.
In 2024, Tropical Storm Debby and then Hurricane Helene affected large portions of North Carolina – and South Carolina as well. We received solidarity grants to provide assistance for two areas affected by flooding during Debby – in Greensboro and Lumberton.
Since Helene, contributions and additional grants from Lutheran Disaster Response have provided funding for new staff positions in both North and South Carolina.
We have welcomed Pastor Emily Lemoine as a part time administrator, acknowledging financial contributions and helping us manage the incredible quantities of donated clean up kits, children’s comfort kits, personal care kits, quilts, and other items that have been distributed to multiple places in Western North Carolina, including Grace and Bethany, Boone, Calvary, Morganton, Living Waters, Cherokee, plus Stateline Resource Center in Trade TN, ABCCM (Asheville Buncombe Community Christian Ministry), and other partners.
In mid-January, Amy Phillips joined our team as the Western North Carolina Response Coordinator. She is coordinating housing and work projects for volunteer teams that have been arriving from all across the country.
So far, 196 volunteers have completed nearly 3600 hours of service. And 740 more volunteers are already scheduled in the coming months!
In April, Kelli Fulmer joined our team as the SC Response Coordinator. She is the only member of our team not present here at this assembly. She will be with us at the SC Synod Assembly in two weeks.
We also appreciate Angela Galbraith, a member of the churchwide LDR staff who is here for assembly and helped us with the pre-assembly event yesterday morning. (Ray, Emily, Amy, and Angela were asked to stand so that everyone could see them.)
Earlier this spring, a report was mailed to each of our congregations in NC, and to everyone who had donated to LDR Carolinas or the NC Synod Disaster Fund since Helene. There are copies of this report on your tables this afternoon.
Another major project for us is our Bridging Together partnership with Mennonite Disaster Service to replace private bridges throughout western NC that were destroyed in the flooding. Thousands need to be replaced to help get people home. Ray has been the coordinator for all the partners in NC VOAD (Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster) who are building private roads and bridges.
There are four specific ways you can continue to help:
- Pray for disaster survivors, volunteers, and response workers across the Carolinas.
- Continue to give to support this work. This work will go on for years to come.
- Volunteer to help with the ongoing work of debris cleanup, home repair, and bridge building.
- Prepare before future disasters impact your home, congregation, or community. We would be glad to visit your congregation to help you learn more.
We encourage you to stop by our display table to learn more about our work and to find out more about how you can help. Some folks have already asked us about how else they can help; what donated items we need; or if we have another suggested project for God’s Work Our Hands Day.
We don’t have another project planned right now, but we would welcome gift cards to Home Depot, Lowe’s, Amazon, or Walmart that can be used to purchase tools, supplies, or building materials that are needed as home repairs continue.
We are not currently accepting more kits, but we would be glad to have more quilts. Those will be given to families as the work ³on their homes is completed. Talk with Amy or me for more information.
We are already planning some special events for the coming months, including:
- A training course for clergy and lay leaders who want to be prepared to offer mental, emotional, and spiritual support to those affected by disaster. LDR will be providing this training at no cost on September 8-10 at Lutheridge. Use the QR code to register now.
- A one-year service of remembrance is being planned for September 27. It will be held at Nativity, Arden. Plus, there will be prayer resources available for you to use in your own congregations, as well.
- We are beginning to plan for another online book study of the book A Ready Hope. Look for more information in synod e-news soon.
We know that we could not have responded to Helene in such a meaningful way without your help. Please stand as you are able if you (or your congregation) have helped with the Helene response by:
Organizing chaplains for evacuation shelters
Providing emergency housing for resettled immigrants
Volunteering at the multi-agency warehouse
Helping clear downed trees on homes
Helping clear downed trees at Lutheridge or Lutherock
Assembling and donating clean up kits (aka flood buckets)
Assembling and donating children’s comfort kits
Assembling and donating personal care or hygiene kits
Donating quilts
Donating blankets
Donating coats or new clothes
Donating gas cans or 2 in 1 oil
Donating other special supplies like propane tanks or tents
Delivering supplies in a rental truck
Delivering supplies in the NC Synod/LDR Carolinas trailer
Delivering supplies in another trailer
Serving as a collection point for donated kits, quilts, or other items
Taking phone calls for assistance on Crisis Clean Up (We recently learned that 45 volunteers from LDR Carolinas handled over 1500 calls for assistance in 60 days last fall!)
Volunteering through LDR Carolinas, working with Amy Phillips, since early this spring
Are planning to volunteer – individually or with a team – in the coming months
Donating gift cards
Donating to the NC or SC Synod Disaster Fund
Donating to LDR Carolinas
Donating to Bridging Together
Finally, last but most important, please stand if you have prayed for those impacted by Helene, the volunteers working on recovery, and for the work of LDR Carolinas.
We also owe thanks to the NC Synod staff who have all helped load and unload donated items. So many items! This includes gathering items from events across the synod!
We could not do this work without all of you and your support. Thank you!