Hurricane Isaac: Donations and Volunteers–How to Help
August 31, 2012
Remember “Cash is Bestâ€
Financial contributions to voluntary agencies can be used to purchase specific needed items on scene which helps the local economy and prevents voluntary partners from having to transport items at great expense. See the links below to donate cash to the active voluntary agencies working in the state of your choice.
Collecting Goods Is Not Favored
Clothing, household items, and food are best provided by well-funded voluntary agencies and not through the expensive process of collecting, sorting, packaging, transporting, receiving, sorting, and distributing of goods. But if you do host a collection, know the facts: (1) what is needed, (2) where it is needed, (3) who will receive and distribute it, and (4) how they want it packaged and shipped. Speak to voluntary agencies working the disaster to determine what the specific needs are before you collect. Better yet, post an offer of goods at the links provided below for the state of your choice. Voluntary partners and emergency management will review your offer and advise you if it is needed.
Volunteering Your Time
The best way to volunteer after disaster is through affiliating with a recognized disaster-related voluntary agency. Unconnected volunteers who show up at disaster sites are called “spontaneous unaffiliated volunteers†and often require the support of already busy agencies and officials. It’s better to volunteer through an organization, a church, or at a minimum, by connecting with the volunteer coordination offices in the state of your choice.
To donate or volunteer, go to one of these state sites:
- Alabama (Link inactive)
- Arkansas (Link inactive)
- Florida (Link inactive)
- Louisiana (Link inactive)
- Mississippi (Link inactive)
- Texas (Link inactive)
For more information:
FEMA Region IV (FL, AL, MS) | FEMA Region VI (TX, LA) |
---|---|
Larry Buckner | Mark Davis |
Donations Specialist | Donations Specialist |
Send email | Send email |
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