This translation is not completely accurate as it was automatically generated by a computer.
Powered by

Whether a tornado, hurricane, flood, wildfire or earthquake,
when disaster hits a community — or a United Methodist church — pastors
and congregations need to be prepared. This is the first of two parts
on how to be ready for sudden natural disasters. For more information,
go to Churches Dealing with Disaster.
A UMNS Report
By Linda Bloom*
7:00 A.M. ET April 9, 2013
The Rev. Tom Hazelwood (left) and Jeff Baker of the Missouri United
Methodist Disaster Response Team view tornado damage at St. James United
Methodist Church in Joplin, Mo., in May 2011. UMNS file photos by Mike
DuBose.
View in Photo Gallery
When Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast in 2005, United Methodists
in Louisiana were in the process of writing their first disaster plan.
Now, more than 300 of the 500 churches in the Louisiana Annual (regional) Conference have participated in early response training, and a variety of other disaster-related training courses are being assembled that will be offered several times a year.
“People will be able to pick (a course), just like they’re going to
college,” explained the Rev. Darryl Tate, the conference’s director of
disaster ministries and preparedness.
In Louisiana, disaster response has become a part of the United Methodist DNA, he said.
“This is as important as anything else that we do in the life of the church.”
While spring traditionally marks the start of tornado season in the
United States, it seems as if a multitude of disasters — tornados,
hurricanes, floods, wildfires — increasingly occur year-round.
The good news is that The United Methodist Church is involved in
disaster response at all levels. Across the denomination, the United
Methodist Committee on Relief provides resources and training
to conferences. Conferences are providing opportunities for
congregations and individual church members to acquire the tools of
disaster preparedness.
‘Woefully unprepared’
The Rev. Darryl Tate views the ruined sanctuary of St. Luke’s United Methodist Church in New Orleans in September 2005.
View in Photo Gallery
All U.S. conferences have a disaster coordinator, says the Rev. Tom
Hazelwood, UMCOR’s U.S. disaster response coordinator, but that was not
always the case.
Hazelwood remembers being “woefully unprepared” when a deadly
tornado struck Fort Smith, Ark., where he was serving as a pastor, in
1996. When he joined the UMCOR staff 15 years ago,
Hazelwood was determined to provide training to allow conferences to
develop a plan to resource local churches in times of disaster.
In 2004, when four major hurricanes struck Florida and affected other states,
“it really became crystal clear that our focus needed to shift … from
just the annual conference being prepared to the local churches being
prepared,” he explained.
Experiences from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita
along the Gulf Coast a year later accelerated the process. UMCOR was
working as hard as it could, Hazelwood said. However, “when those
hurricanes came ashore, it really was weeks before those local churches
got any help from resources outside themselves.”
Hurricane Katrina “was pure chaos,” Tate remembered. In New Orleans,
“the Methodist Church literally lost an entire district.” Three weeks
later, Hurricane Rita had the same effect on the Lake Charles District.
Tate, who had evacuated, lost both his parsonage and his church,
St. Luke’s United Methodist in the Lakeview neighborhood. A week after
Katrina struck, then-Bishop William Hutchinson assigned him to be
director of the Louisiana Conference Storm Recovery Center.
Seven and a half years later, the Louisiana Conference’s disaster preparedness ministry
provides multiple opportunities for training and is in the process of
developing more. Conference representatives sit on the board of the
state Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster and participate in the
governor’s homeland security, he said, with access to a pass that “can
get us into any disaster area of the state.”
The conference also has invested in an emergency communications system, which was first used in 2008 when Hurricane Gustav occurred as Hutchinson was coming back from renewal leave, allowing him to send ahead a personal message to clergy and lay leaders.
Bishop Cynthia Fierro Harvey, who now leads the Louisiana Conference
and formerly served as UMCOR’s top executive, has that same ability to
communicate instantly with everyone during an emergency. “It reassures
the churches that the conference is on top of it and that the bishop is
definitely on top of it,” Tate said.
Advancements since Katrina
UMCOR’s expertise with disaster case management, volunteer deployment and early response training has improved and expanded since Katrina, Hazelwood pointed out.
Early response training was developed as a way “to credential and
manage those who wanted to volunteer in the immediate aftermath of the
disaster,” he said.
UMCOR also nurtured a partnership with United Methodist Volunteers
in Mission. “Katrina really exposed our lack of coordination and
working together,” Hazelwood explained. “With Haiti (2010 earthquake),
we really were able, for the first time, to be very intentional about
that coordinated effort between VIM and UMCOR.”
Both early response training and the coordination of volunteers were
important factors as United Methodists assisted with the recovery from
flooding caused by the remnants of Hurricane Irene in the Catskills
region of New York, said the Rev. Dale Ashby, Catskill Hudson district disaster coordinator for the New York Annual Conference.
Two United Methodist churches, in Prattsville and Lexington, suffered extensive damage from the August 2011 flooding, requiring major reconstruction, while another church was flooded on one level.
Rebuilding of the most severely damaged homes is continuing. “The
homes that were not condemned have been, by and large, repaired and the
owners moved back in,” Ashby reported.
Consider the challenges
As expected, a few lessons were learned along the way. “One of the
challenges we had right after Irene was equipping the volunteers with
the necessary tools to do the cleanup,” he explained. Churches not in
the flood areas were able to donate equipment, but another challenge
was getting it to the right spot.
The long-term solution: his district has put together an emergency
response trailer filled with equipment “that can be moved to wherever
the need is.”
Peter Vasquenz describes damage to his mother's home in the Staten
Island borough of New York following Hurricane Sandy in November 2012.
View in Photo Gallery
At both district and congregational levels, Ashby is emphasizing the
importance of the early response training provided by UMCOR. For
congregations, he noted, such training is “always a big help because
then they’re ready to hit the ground running.”
Early response teams from outside the disaster area are
self-sufficient for housing, food and equipment, Ashby pointed out, “so
we don’t impose further burden upon the community that was impacted.”
Finding housing for later long-term recovery teams from other parts
of conference took more effort. “We were fortunate to have a facility
up near Prattsville that had dormitories and a kitchen,” he said.
Other ways congregations can prepare for disasters:
- Have a few basic supplies, such as cleaning buckets, shovels and bleach, on hand for the initial cleanup
- Keep a list of contact information for church and community members
who need to be checked on and designated people to make those checks
- Make sure flood insurance is adequate if the building is near a river or stream
In Lexington, the congregation learned after Irene that its flood
insurance covered only part of the building. “Be sure to know what it
covers and what it doesn’t cover,” Ashby advised.
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service multimedia reporter based in New York. Follow her at http://twitter.com/umcscribe.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.