World Renew DRS Joins Response Planning in South Carolina Flooding
As areas of South Carolina remain unsafe and emergency personnel work to contain them, World Renew Disaster Response Services volunteers are joining government and other response organizations to assess the crisis and prioritize resources to determine a response.
“Our Regional Managers are participating in planning and coordination for a response to the flooding in South Carolina,” World Renew DRS Director Ron Willett said Tuesday.
“However, until it’s safe and the water has subsided, search and rescue teams are regulating access to the affected areas.”
One to two feet of torrential rain fell on Columbia, S.C. and the surrounding area over the weekend as Hurricane Joaquin trapped and funneled Gulf moisture up the East Coast.
State officials are urging residents to stay home on Tuesday after at least seven people were killed in the flooding on Sunday, most swept away in their vehicles by the raging water.
President Obama also declared a federal emergency over the weekend, releasing resources and personnel to respond.
Hundreds of thousands of residents are without drinking water or electricity, and hundreds of roads and bridges are closed.
More than a dozen emergency shelters have been opened in the affected areas for evacuated, displaced, and stranded residents.
“We expect that World Renew DRS regional managers for the East Coast will continue monitoring the progress of the storm and response with officials and other disaster organizations over the next few days,” Willett said.
Storm preparation efforts were in full swing last week along the portion of the eastern seaboard in New York and New Jersey that were devastated in 2012 by Super-Storm Sandy.
But that area, along with much of the rest of the East Coast, appears to have received less rain and more localized flooding, according to news reports.
At the same time, World Renew DRS continues sending volunteers to Ocean County, N.J. on an ongoing basis to continue to help identify low-income, elderly and disabled residents so that they receive the assistance they need to repair and rebuild their homes after Sandy.
Willett says that World Renew DRS expects to continue to assist homeowners in Ocean County in response to needs remaining from Sandy for the next two years.
“The complexity and length of the response needed for the flooding in South Carolina is yet to be determined,” Willett said, “but it’s already clear in these early days that the magnitude of the disaster and the resources needed to recover from it are significant.”
World Renew DRS is appealing for funds to launch a possible response to the flooding in South Carolina resulting from this storm flooding and other hurricanes that affect North America this fall.
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