
Early days yet, just our initial efforts:
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2005 ... 82-cp.html
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dougjp wrote:More detail, what we are doing up here in Canada. Call us a Community![]()
Early days yet, just our initial efforts:
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2005 ... 82-cp.html
MBismyPlayground wrote:By the way, I love Denvers idea of utilizing the old military base. Wish all communites that have them would use them in this fashion.Makes for a little more independent, family type living, with everything available in one area.
CajunMama wrote:Just finished making 1216 cookies for the "Play Day". Thanks to BreinLA who came and picked up some ingredients and baked a 3rd of the cookies and to my daughter who gave up a night out. I started at 6 this evening and baked continually. I'll let y'all know how "Play Day" went.
CajunMama wrote:Play Day was a joke. They weren't bussing the evacuees from the CajunDome to the park...they were reaching out to those evacuees that were put up in homes and hotels. The ones that were able to move about the city and sleep in a bed instead of a cot with 7000 other people. We went a picked up a very nice young woman and her 2 year old. Others did the same. And some from the CajunDome who had cars came. If logistics for the Play Day were a problem they should have had us set up across the street from the CajunDome. We had food for 5000 people!!! Activities for kids! As we were tearing down we were told we could go set up at the CajunDome....after being out in the sun for 5 hours?????????
But I did meet some wonderful people who are staying at the CajunDome. They had nothing but nice things to say about the welcome and help they have received from us in Lafayette.
More Than 300 Hurricane Evacuees Due To Arrive In Raleigh
POSTED: 7:04 pm EDT September 3, 2005
UPDATED: 7:15 pm EDT September 5, 2005
RALEIGH, N.C. -- More than 300 victims of Hurricane Katrina are expected to arrive at Raleigh-Durham International Airport Monday evening, Wake County officials said.
Once the evacuees arrive, they will be transported to the Wake County Hurricane Diaster Victim Center, which is located in Raleigh.
On Saturday afternoon, local officials were notified of the need to host 500 to 1,000 evacuees of Hurricane Katrina within hours.
In response to the request, Wake County, the City of Raleigh and the RBC Center partnered to set up the Wake County Hurricane Disaster Victim Center.
Emergency crews also set up receiving stations in Charlotte and Greensboro for a mix of medical patients and other people who have been forced to flee damaged areas along the Gulf Coast.
Wake County expected at least 500 people who did not need medical attention to arrive Saturday. But officials sent their emergency teams home Saturday evening. They then called workers out again past midnight when word began to circulate that some storm victims might be coming.
But a county spokeswoman said Sunday that State Emergency Management officials have instructed Wake, Guilford and Mecklenburg counties to assume a standby role until further notice.
"We are prepared and ready to receive individuals with a two-hour notice," Wake County Community Health Director Gibbie Harris said. "The community has come together to quickly marshal resources to respond to this need, and we have demonstrated that we can handle something of this magnitude."
About 400 Raleigh, Wake County and RBC Center employees converted a 100,000-square-foot vacant corporate training center in Raleigh into a recovery center -- complete with cots, blankets and pillows -- in less than 24 hours.
"We have no idea how long these people will be here," Harris said. "We just have to prepare for them to be here a while."
The RBC Center and the Raleigh Convention and Conference Center will provide culinary services and operate a cafeteria, if evacuees arrive, officials said.
"The county and city staff have pulled together to make this happen in less than 24 hours," Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker said. "I'm proud of our community's response."
Officials said the recovery center could not accept donations.
"We admire and understand people's desire to help these victims," Joe Bryan, chair of the Wake County Board of Commissioners, said. "We thank them for their generosity and ask them to funnel their donations through established relief agencies."
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