'We are restoring lives,' says recovery station director
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A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose Leona
Cousins, 95, pauses while sweeping the driveway at her home in Slidell,
La. "I got to keep my home tidy," she says, pointing to a shed behind
her damaged house.
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Leona
Cousins, 95, pauses while sweeping the driveway at her home in Slidell,
La. "I got to keep my home tidy," she says, pointing to a sparsely
furnished shed behind her storm-damaged house that is being repaired
with the help of United Methodist volunteers. She has been living in the
shed during the day and spending nights with a niece since Hurricane
Katrina hit in August 2005. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose. Photo #06-979.
Accompanies UMNS story #514. 8/29/06 |
Aug. 29, 2006
By Kathy L. Gilbert*
SLIDELL, La. (UMNS) -- On a hot and humid summer day, Leona Cousins is out
sweeping her driveway.
"I got to keep my home tidy," she
says. She laughs as she points to a sparsely furnished shed behind her Hurricane
Katrina-wrecked
house. She
has been living in the shed during the day and spending nights with a niece
since Katrina hit Slidell Aug. 29, 2005.
Dale Kimball, director of the United Methodist Slidell Recovery Station, says
that Cousins, 95, and people like her, are the reason he does what he does.
And what he does is spend six days a week driving a truck from one end of town
to the other, 12 or more hours a day, helping the poorest in his hometown rebuild
their lives.
Restoring lives
A year after the storm sent a tidal wave over Slidell, Kimball and his crew
of contractors and volunteers have been helping people like Cousins who have
no insurance and no other way to rebuild their lives.
"That's what we are doing -- we are restoring lives," he
says.
A retired Navy man, Kimball closed his construction business when Bishop William
Hutchinson asked him to take over at the recovery station based in his local
church, Aldersgate United Methodist Church. Three contractors that worked with
him have also joined the team.
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A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose Ken
Ward (left) and Dale Kimball say people like Leona Cousins, 95, are the
reason they work long hours with the United Methodist Slidell (La.)
Disaster Recovery Station.
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Ken
Ward (left) and Dale Kimball say people like Leona Cousins, 95, are the
reason they work long hours six days a week with the United Methodist
Slidell (La.) Disaster Recovery Station, helping rebuild homes damaged
by Hurricane Katrina. The storm struck Louisiana in August 2005. A UMNS
photo by Mike DuBose. Photo #06-680. Accompanies UMNS story #514.
8/29/06
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Kimball says he has been told 95 percent of the reconstruction in his hometown
has been done by faith-based organizations.
The United Methodist Committee on Relief pays administrative costs for the
Slidell center as well as the six other centers in the state. The relief agency
also provides money to buy building materials for homes.
The great thing about UMCOR is that its money is available for everyone in
need, Kimball says. To date, the center has served 3,191 clients and has 261
open cases waiting for some stage of reconstruction. More than 3,000 volunteers
from 25 states and three countries have contributed 159,266 hours and provided
$2.7 million in free labor.
The key to the rebuilding is the volunteers and donations to UMCOR, Kimball
says.
"We really need 50 to 60 volunteers a week," says Ken Ward, one
of the contractors working with the center. "This week we had 17."
Helping the helpless
Cousins came to the center's attention when a passing sheriff's
officer found her crying on the front steps of her house. She had nowhere to
turn and didn't know she could get help to rebuild her home.
When Kimball saw Cousins, she got bumped to the
front of the line. He says volunteer teams "love her."
"Once (volunteers) meet her, they want to do everything in their power
to help her," he says. Cousins will be back in the home her father built
for her in the 1950s by the end of August.
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A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose Youth
from Tigard (Ore.) United Methodist Church install siding at the home
of Regina Batiste in Slidell, La., as part of Project Noah, sponsored by
First United Methodist Church of Baton Rouge, La.
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Youth
from Tigard (Ore.) United Methodist Church install siding at the home
of Regina Batiste in Slidell, La., as part of Project Noah, sponsored by
First United Methodist Church of Baton Rouge, La. From left are Chris
Whitehead, Madeline Stafford and Karen Bowman. Hurricane Katrina struck
the state Aug. 29, 2005. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose. Photo #06-978.
Accompanies UMNS story #514. 8/29/06 |
Other clients served by the center include sisters Eris Lajaunie and Jermaine
Pastoret, who have lived side by side in Slidell all their lives.
Before the storm center came to their rescue, they were scammed out of more
than $6,000 by someone who promised to replace their windows and doors, Lajaunie
says.
"I am 82, and my sister is 90," she says. "My husband died
two weeks after the storm because he couldn?t cope."
She says she feels so "stupid" for trusting someone with that
much money. Kimball assures her his help comes without a price tag. "If
anyone else tells you it will cost you money, you call me," he says.
Kimball says there are many elderly people like
Lajuanie's husband who
have died because of the stress from the destruction of the storm. "They
are the unknown victims," he says.
A few blocks away, young people are swarming over the home of Regina Batiste.
Her home was knocked off its piers and was sitting on its side. The Federal
Emergency Management Agency and the city told her the home was unsalvageable.
Fortunately no one told that to volunteers from Project Noah, a group started
by First United Methodist Church in Baton Rouge. They jacked up the house and
put it on a new foundation.
About 1,000 students from 24 states signed up for Project Noah (New Orleans
Area Hope). They worked in Louisiana for eight weeks.
Church, parsonage restored
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A UMNS photo by Kathy L. Gilbert The
Rev. Ernest Scott, pastor of Hartzell Mt. Zion United Methodist Church
in Slidell, La., says he has experienced the power of the United
Methodist connection through volunteer groups.
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The
Rev. Ernest Scott, pastor of Hartzell Mt. Zion United Methodist Church
in Slidell, La., says he has experienced firsthand the power of the
United Methodist connection through volunteer groups that have helped
restore his church following Hurricane Katrina. The storm struck in
August 2005. A UMNS photo by Kathy L. Gilbert. Photo #06-XXX.
Accompanies UMNS story #XXX. 8/XX/06
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The Rev. Ernest Scott, pastor of Hartzell Mt. Zion United Methodist Church,
has experienced firsthand the power of the United Methodist connection.
"If I had a word to say to the general church, it would be that our
connectionism is alive and well," he says. Hartzell Mt. Zion and the
parsonage were just a few of the many structures destroyed by the storm.
The church never stopped holding services, first in the parking lot, then
in a partially completed building and now in a beautiful sanctuary.
"Without the help of UMCOR, we would not be in the position where we
are now with the church and the parsonage," he says.
He echoes Kimball and Ward's praise of volunteer
teams.
"I watch those young kids roll up their sleeves and unload bundles of
shingles and I know they mean to make a difference," Scott says.
"Some of the greatest groups we have had have been young high school
and college kids. They have the most productive and willing spirits," Kimball
says.
Scott has advice for the young people. "I tell them, 'Don't
forget this. Ten or 20 years from now, you can tell people you helped restore
Slidell and the church.'
"I tell them to put it in their journals
and on their resumes. Anyone worth their salt will look at that on a resume
and know this
is somebody who
had done something in their lives."
Kimball and Scott feel good about the future of the church and the country
after a year of watching young people come into Slidell and work.
"A lot of people question the future of the church," Kimball says. "I
say just come and watch these young kids and you will know the future of the
church is in great hands."
*Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville,
Tenn.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or
newsdesk@umcom.org.
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