Howdy, howdy. I returned to STL from Greensburg Kansas, where I've been since the 6th, this last friday, the 25th. At first our operations consisted of tying in with the Salvation Army, and helping them at various point of distribution (POD) sites and working on their canteens, since we had not yet received a mission assignment from the State (which then works through FEMA to assign us). We also staffed the two check points into the city which was a complete waste of everyone's time. The concept was to keep track of everyone who was entering the city and also turn away sight-seers - but few people actually got deterred. People would drive up, fill out paper work and the official "tag" they received from me which signaled they'd been through the check point was a handsomely ripped piece of caution tape duct-taped to the inside of the windshield - not our idea. This measure would have had some salvageable integrity accept on Tuesday, the day we were implementing this broader check point, Pres. Bush was visiting and secret service shut down our operation mid-morning because the checkpoint was too close to the helipad- where henceforth, paradoxically, anyone could get in since they didn't implement their own checkpoint. We were about 250 ft. from the 6 blackhawks, including Marine One with the prez in it, when they landed near our check point.
Soon after the check-point debacle we were given our mission assignment to run the volunteer reception center (VRC) - which is a lot of work. Our tasks include: keeping track of what residents want done on their properties with continuous updates, scouting properties, keeping track of all the legal paperwork volunteers and residents must fill out, making sure volunteers sign-in and out so that the city can be reimbursed for volunteer hours from FEMA, operating a call center, leading teams out into the field, coordinating with the Samaritan's Purse, Mennonite Disaster Team, NCCC teams, Christian Disaster Team, etc...
I also encouraged a semi-successful recycling program in Greensburg after witnessing how much waste was accruing from donated plastic bottles of water, cans, cardboard boxes filled with food, etc...It wasn't too hard to do since the surrounding cities were so very eager to help Greensburg in anyway they could. I got donated recycling bins, a recycling trailer, a construction site sized waste bin for used cardboard and drivers to pick the stuff up and bring it to a recycling center in Dodge City. The support for this recycling iniative has been very positive and I hope continues long after Americorps has left the city. My very competent friend Sabrina has taken over this program in my stead.
It is hard to say how long some of our Americorps team will be down (or over) in Greensburg - as long as FEMA/Kansas wants us there, we'll be there. I forgot to mention that FEMA has a food tent set-up which we're permitted to enjoy (along with the other gov. agencies and a few volunteer ones) and let me tell you - the cheese cake and steak roll out in abundance. This feature served as a pleasant beginning and end to the day (also they had a laundry staff to do our dirty work).
I will post pictures as soon as I can - my friends who are still in Greensburg have many pictures on their digital cameras.
My warmest.
Sunday, May 27, 2007
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
The Heat is On...
Howdy, howdy. So I've spent another week in STL getting two red, swollen protusions on my neck checked out. The doctor wasn't sure what has been causing them since the test results (bacterial and viral) were negative. I'm not very worried about them, though it would make me feel better to have a solid answer. Other than that, things have been quite well. The temperature is on the rise which means a sweaty, sweaty Kevin. I like to start the day out with a good sweat by biking 40 min. to work and then just keep sweating all day long - last night I was even sweating while eating -what could be better? Fortunately, I sleep in the basement which is 15 degrees cooler than upstairs.
We have not been called out to any disasters in the last 2.5 months to the aggravation of some people on the team, since disaster response is the reason many signed up. We've just been cutting down invasives, spraying garlic mustard and building a short trail in Sherwood Forest. For me it's been fine, and in fact I think I could pretty much do anything with some of the people on this team and have a good time - though some travel outside of MO would be nice and luckily I should be doing so in late June.
This past weekend some of us went to a patio bar after work on friday called "Big Daddy's" which carries the slogan: "Best Bar in the Whole Wide World". An understatement if you ask me. Saturday we had a mass bbq at a member's backyard to celebrate "mad cool meghan p's" birthday and then wound up dancing later in the night at a bar. Sunday we played ultimate in tower grove park, which has been the norm for the last few sabbaths.
Hope you are well.
We have not been called out to any disasters in the last 2.5 months to the aggravation of some people on the team, since disaster response is the reason many signed up. We've just been cutting down invasives, spraying garlic mustard and building a short trail in Sherwood Forest. For me it's been fine, and in fact I think I could pretty much do anything with some of the people on this team and have a good time - though some travel outside of MO would be nice and luckily I should be doing so in late June.
This past weekend some of us went to a patio bar after work on friday called "Big Daddy's" which carries the slogan: "Best Bar in the Whole Wide World". An understatement if you ask me. Saturday we had a mass bbq at a member's backyard to celebrate "mad cool meghan p's" birthday and then wound up dancing later in the night at a bar. Sunday we played ultimate in tower grove park, which has been the norm for the last few sabbaths.
Hope you are well.
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Fire Season
Saturday, February 24, 2007
Slip slidin away...from sw mo...hopefully
Hey all. I'm back in STL for the weekend. Yeah. I mean it, because I sleep in my bed here 4-6 nights a month. Not nearly enough to justify paying rent. I left Mt. Vernon MO last week ("Home of the "Mountaineers" which funnily enough was "Mountainqueers" on Wikipedia up until last week. I'm not sure how good their high-school athletics are though.). I left with a bang, literally. To make a semi-long story short. I was driving a Methodist truck with a trailer and a skid loader on the trailer to work. Not 2 minutes from the church where I was staying and storing the rig, the trailer started to fish-tail half-way down a fairly steep hill. I thought it would steady out but it definitely didn't. It swung more violently with every pass and to avoid hitting a school bus I drove into a ditch totalling the truck. I was and am fine, somehow.
This last week I was at Shaw Nature Reserve cutting down honeysuckle and spraying them with herbicide. It was a really great week. The weather was gorgeous, my crew was good, the accomodations were cozy and we ate well. What more can a man ask for. We were working with one of the volunteer coordinators there named Bob. Bob is kind of a crotchety old man, but we got over our differences and he took us on an amazing hike the last day we were there. It was to date the most beautiful area of MO I've seen. I wish I had a camera with.
Last night found me and my close associates here prowling the best part of St. Louis: the Soulard neighborhood. We visited quite a few bars and danced till late in the night. Very satisfying. I'm not sure what this coming week will bring. Perhaps back to Mt. Vernon or perhaps deployed to an area affected by the weather this weekend. Hope you are well.
Love, Kevin
This last week I was at Shaw Nature Reserve cutting down honeysuckle and spraying them with herbicide. It was a really great week. The weather was gorgeous, my crew was good, the accomodations were cozy and we ate well. What more can a man ask for. We were working with one of the volunteer coordinators there named Bob. Bob is kind of a crotchety old man, but we got over our differences and he took us on an amazing hike the last day we were there. It was to date the most beautiful area of MO I've seen. I wish I had a camera with.
Last night found me and my close associates here prowling the best part of St. Louis: the Soulard neighborhood. We visited quite a few bars and danced till late in the night. Very satisfying. I'm not sure what this coming week will bring. Perhaps back to Mt. Vernon or perhaps deployed to an area affected by the weather this weekend. Hope you are well.
Love, Kevin
Tuesday, January 30, 2007
Recovery in SW MO
Hey all - hope all is well. Things are going pretty well here. Americorps is now committed to keeping track of the volunteer hours in the area, databasing work requests from residents, recruiting volunteers and matching volunteer groups with jobs = an office life - something I don't want to be doing for too long. I've been doing a lot of calling lately and thankfully have had the opportunity to obtain a skid-loader (bobcat) certification. My spirits are up but I find myself bitter about the area. I'm sick of the redneck sounding accent, the horrible grammar (ex. speaking: "we'z been told ya'll could help..." ex. of writing: "need lotz of..." , "been veary busy"), they don't have recycling down here (we've been keeping our plastics, etc... to bring to Springfield), disabilities are really common, obesity is rampant....the list goes on. I keep thinking how different this area is from the really progressive areas of the U.S., such as the Portland area. How much wider can the cultural differences between these types of communities become (environmentally, education level, social and international awareness)?
Gotta run, Kevin
Gotta run, Kevin
Friday, January 26, 2007
Tuesday, January 23, 2007
Ice Storm '07
It's been a bit of a hiatus from the blog. Right now I'm in Mt. Vernon, Mo working at the Lawrence County EOC (emergency operations center). I was deployed to the STL County EOC at first (which is really cool - in a bomb shelter - lots of expensive equip) and then traveled to SW MO before ending up here. Our primary duties have shifted from providing emergency relief: shelters, food and water for the area to setting up for an invasion of volunteers when we get the ok from the government (there is a lengthy declaration and clarification process we have to wait on before FEMA can work through SEMA and then the county and municipalities). At the height of the power outage there were about 300,000 without power. There are still quite a bit without power, though mainly in the rural areas so peope forget about it. Farmers are having a tough time getting drinking water to their cattle, etc... I'll hopefully have time to write more later. Peace.
Friday, December 15, 2006
Sunday, December 10, 2006
Sunday, December 03, 2006
Address
My address down here is: 327 E. 2nd avenue, Pass Christian, MS, 39571. I will be leaving Dec. 21st to go back to STL and then to Minneapolis on the 23rd.
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