Our Blog
Responding to Debby
This morning dawned bright and clear in the High Country of North Carolina, where we stayed last night after an LDR Carolinas Sunday yesterday at Bethany Lutheran Church, just outside Boone. But we have been following closely the forecasts for Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas as Tropical Storm – now Hurricane – Debby approached and has made landfall in Florida. Intense rainfall and flooding are forecast for much of the Carolinas, particularly in the Lowcountry of South Carolina.
We spent the afternoon crafting Facebook posts and email messages to be shared with the LDR Carolinas Network, and with the NC and SC Synods. We invite you to join our network here to learn more about our work and the progress of Debby.
While we are busy encouraging those in the path of this dangerous storm to make their final preparations and checking in with the conference deans, we also want to share these important reminders with others:
Pray for those affected by the storm. Pray for individuals whose lives have been disrupted. Pray for congregations in the affected areas who work to help others in their communities. Pray for those who work to provide essential services such as utilities, medical care, and nursing care.
Please do not self-deploy after a disaster. Certainly, help your neighbors as you can, but don’t venture into dangerous situations or attempt to do work that you are not trained to do safely. Removing downed trees from homes is a prime example.
Instead, volunteer through our partner organizations in VOAD (Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster) such as the American Red Cross, Salvation Army, United Methodist Committee on Relief, Baptists on Mission, and Team Rubicon. All of these organizations have teams who respond quickly to provide food, shelter, and emergency assistance.
While we will be reaching out to our congregations immediately, the strengths of Lutheran Disaster Response are in providing spiritual and emotional care, disaster case management, and assisting with long-term recovery. We will still be at work long after other organizations have moved on.
Please do not send stuff. Not even food or bottled water, unless it has been requested and you know for certain that there is an organization in the disaster area ready to receive and distribute the materials. Watch for us to share information about items that we know are needed and how to get them to the appropriate locations.
Give! Donate financially to Lutheran Disaster Response either as a designated gift for this disaster or to be used wherever needed. Donate to the synod disaster funds in North Carolina and South Carolina through the synod office. Those funds are used to help congregations in need following a disaster.
We also encourage you to consider the projects that we recently shared as ideas for God’s Work Our Hands Day, the ELCA Churchwide day of service, on September 8. Perhaps, given the current situation, you could even work on those clean up kits and children’s comfort kits right away! You can find more information here in our blog, on our Facebook page, and in recent e-newsletters from both NC and SC Synods. Here is a link to the downloadable instructions. We are still identifying collection points for these kits. Let us know if your congregation is able to help in that way!
Still looking for a project idea for God’s Work Our Hands Day?
LDR Carolinas would like to offer these suggestions!
Here are two possible kits that you or your congregation can assemble and deliver to a collection point in September. They will be stored here in the Carolinas for use following a disaster.
Also, please let us know if your congregation would be willing to serve as a collection point for these kits in September. We are working to identify several locations in both North and South Carolina. You would not need to provide long-term storage for the kits.
Clean Up Buckets
Items should be new and all liquid items must be capped and securely tightened.
Place all items into the bucket, making sure they are packed securely. Snap the lid on tight.
Each bucket should include ALL of these essential items. Please do not substitute or add items. If the requested size is not available, go down to the next available size.
Many of these items can be purchased at local dollar stores at substantial savings.
(1) 5-gallon bucket with resealable lid (If reused, please scrub clean. Do not use a bucket that has held chemicals of any kind. No screw lid. Advertisement on the outside acceptable.)
(1) 4-8 oz pump spray air freshener
(5) scouring pads (No stainless steel or pads with soap in them. Remove from packaging.)
(7) sponges, assorted sizes including one large
(1) scrub brush (With or without handle.)
(18) reusable, lightweight multipurpose dry cleaning towels (No terrycloth, microfiber or paper towels. Remove from packaging.)
(1) 32-64 oz or two 25 oz bottle(s) of liquid laundry detergent
(1) 16-34 oz bottle of liquid disinfectant dish soap
(1) 12-40 oz bottle of liquid concentrate household cleaner that can be mixed with water (No spray bottles.)
(1) package of 36-50 clothespins
(1) 50-100 ft clothesline (Cotton or plastic line.)
(5) dust masks (N95 particulate respirator dust masks preferred; No surgical masks.)
(2) pairs of heavy-duty, waterproof dishwashing gloves (Latex-free, non-surgical. Durable for multiple-use. Remove from ackaging.)
(1) pair of work gloves (Cotton with leather palm or all leather.)
(20-28) heavy duty or contractor type 30-45-gallon trash bags on a roll (Remove from packaging.)
(1) 6-9 oz bottle of non-aerosol insect repellent (Pump spray bottles must have protective covers. Packs of 10-20 insect repellent wipes also acceptable.)
Children’s Comfort Kits
These items should be packed in a plastic shoebox:
- Notebook
- Crayons
- Bubbles
- Small plush toy
- Stress ball
- Playdough
- Hand sanitizer
Questions? Contact Ruth Ann Sipe at [email protected]
Opportunities to Serve, Celebrate, and Connect
Garage damaged at St. Luke, Summerville
Photo credit: Rev. Nathan Rice
On June 10, a severe storm with a microburst struck Summerville and Ladson, SC. We were recently contacted by South Carolina Emergency Management about over 50 households who are still in need of help with debris removal from those storms. As you can see from the photo above, St. Luke Lutheran in Summerville had damage themselves, which they have been able to clean up.
We are NOT asking folks to self-deploy and simply show up to work. There are a couple of ways to get volunteers to the right places. The first would be to work directly with the local Red Cross.
The other would be to set dates for work days. As far as we know, mostly what will be needed are gloves, rakes, and maybe brush saws. Chainsaw groups already went through many of the neighborhoods and cut trees down.
Please help us identify volunteers who are willing to help and dates when they would be available to work. Thanks in advance for your willingness to help your neighbors in need!
We also have some financial assistance available to support domestic disaster recovery service trips planned by congregations or other groups. Contact us for more information!
We are pleased to report the completion of a bridge in Lincoln County. This bridge, which is on a private road serving 26 families, is a partnership project. MDS (Mennonite Disaster Services) provided the engineering and most of the volunteer labor, while Lutheran Disaster Response provided a $75K grant toward this project. Other organizations, including PDA (Presbyterian Disaster Assistance and Samaritan’s Purse) assisted with the funding as well. (The completed bridge is shown above, with the local fire department tanker truck and the volunteer construction team. The bridge was engineered and constructed to allow for emergency services and new mobile homes to reach the neighborhood.) More information is available here.
Finally, if you would like to participate in the LDR Carolinas Network to receive information like this via email along with invitations to participate in Zoom meetings with updates, please sign up here.