Cooper & Emily
Been There is an informal clearinghouse where individuals offering in-kind donations and individuals in need can connect. Click on the tabs at the top of the page to see all that's offered and being talked about in the Clearinghouse.
We are two Moms (with six kids between us, all under the age of eight). We are not related to FEMA, the Red Cross or any relief organization or government agency in any way. This weblog is a public forum, which we do not screen, and we do not make any representation to the accuracy or the reliability of the comments published here. We reserve the right to delete items posted on this weblog that we feel are inappropriateWe’ve said it before, but it’s worth saying again today — being a part of this Clearinghouse and the efforts of so many people here have been a highlight of our lives.
From the early days of Katrina when we were screaming at our television sets at the horror and injustice of the destruction and governmental indifference to the Gulf Coast, you, and thousands and thousands of others, came to the Clearinghouse because you wanted to do something, anything, to help out all the many people in need.
And then just a few days later, when those of you who lost your homes and so much more were able to go online, or friends or family went online for you, you came here to get a helping hand or tell your story. Your words made us cry because you gave voice to the great big enormous tragedy that had unfolded before our eyes, in our own country, down the street. It was almost too much to imagine, but then you spoke with such strength and honesty and compassion and gave layers of meaning to a story that was all over the news but still was missing the most important, the most human element – the inner dialogue of you, the people who had gone through it all.
Who can forget Toni, 21 years old with three boys, saying how she knew she’d get through the dark days because she saw her grandmother rebuild after Camille, or the last haunting paragraph of her beautiful piece —
Many believe the government should be doing more for them. Me, I am just thankful to have the air mattress I sleep on and my family driving me crazy. I say I have seen the best and worst of humanity. I have seen riots over food and money, and I have seen complete strangers open their homes to give those who have no place to go a roof over their head. I have faith in my city and state, and I am with my government in saying that we will rebuild, not just buildings, but lives as well. It will of course take time and plenty of patience. For those of us that call south Mississippi home, it is worth it. Like a the phoenix from the fire my town will return as beautiful as was before Katrina, and I pray that the hardship of the last month, will be a lesson for the future.
Or Maddie’s description of how hard it was to get FEMA aid —
Try lugging an infant 2 miles to the nearest place that’s giving out goods. At that point all you have energy and room for is what food you can carry or fit in a stroller. What would be hugely helpful are shopping carts, wagons, wheel barrels, etc. Things that folks can fit things in if they don’t have transport. We have one bridge open in the whole Coast area, theres one way in and one way out. That’s it. The Red Cross and FEMA seems to love to put their help centers on the other side of the Biloxi Bay in Ocean Springs….the only way to get there is the highway or boat since that bridge is out. We aren’t allowed in the water and most of us don’t have cars to drive over there and we aren’t allowed to walk on the highways…how do you get help? You can imagine the frustration.
We heard that many of you had been through tough times of your own and people had come through for you then, and you wanted to do the same for others.
My house burnt down when I was a jr. in high school and people helped us, so I want to help someone else.
Last year, I delivered my youngest son prematurely in the middle of Hurricane Frances here in South Florida. I want to help.
We are a small town family in Six Lakes Michigan, and would love to help in any way that we can. We have 7 children and know first hand how hard life can be. Thank you for your time. Hope to help someone in need.
And local groups sprung up, taking the lead from Pittsburgh where the Gulf Coast Connection, led by Lurline Cadogan, has brought together the more than 400 people who relocated there from the Gulf Coast and have gathered and supported each other with jobs, housing, memorial services, parades, baseball games, and much more.
Throughout, you have inspired us all with the enormous and imaginative ways you gave of yourselves – from used cars and airline miles to retooled Mac computers (nearly 500 of them over the last year!), homemade soaps and quilts, baby clothes, school supplies, even beauty parlor chairs to help rebuild a lost salon. Schoolchildren, church groups, neighborhood associations and alumnae groups came together to help people and families.
And you have brought to life a new form of giving – connected giving – where as donors and recipients you found each other, one-to-one, so that whatever was there to be given went to a person or family who needed exactly that, often in a wrapped package with their names on it, and a thoughtful, heartfelt note inside.
We got the first of two boxes in today (from a Been there Clearinghouse donor) and it was like xmas for Ty and I. He had his first hot bath in almost three weeks tonight. He chowed two bottles of formula, one of water, and curled up in his new crib. There hasn’t been a peep since. THANK YOU!
When the anniversary of Katrina arrived, thousands of you came back to the Clearinghouse, to give, to connect, to share your need. It was so sad for us all that a whole year has passed and still there is so much work to be done.
For the past several months, though, with the exception of the anniversary of Katrina, the traffic to the Clearinghouse has dropped off considerably, and instead, we are sorry to say we are being overloaded with spam and other undesirable activity. We’ve always intended for the site to operate on its own, as a community corkboard of sorts, but with spammers and others, the dynamic has changed. Rather than close the Clearinghouse down completely, which we don’t want to do, we have decided to delete the many posts by people whose offers have been accepted or whose needs have been met, leaving up only the most recent request posts. We are turning off the ability to add new comments, though we invite the community to email us if they have links to other resources we should include here or ideas for other ways of helping and connecting with the people of the Gulf Coast that we could post here as well.
As we make this change, we’d like to acknowledge the great and inspiring connections that have been made here, and to pause and think of the very many people who are still struggling day to day to rebuild their lives after losing so very much.
All our love and best wishes,
Emily and Cooper
FROM PROJECT KATRINA:
Louisiana Medicaid is resuming its annual financial eligibility review
for all Medicaid enrollees whose renewal had been deferred due to last years’ hurricanes.
In addition, it will review Medicaid financial eligibility for all enrollees whose renewal is past due (normally reviewed annually), and whose last reported residential address is out-of-state.
Enrollees are being asked, on the renewal form, “If you are temporarily living in another state, do you intend to return to live in Louisiana?”
If the person answers, “yes,” and meets all other criteria for financial eligibility, their Medicaid eligibility will be extended. No additional verification will be required for continued residency.
Financial eligibility reviews can be started by mail or by telephone.
Anyone from the New Orleans area receiving Louisiana Medicaid should make sure the Medicaid agency has their current address by calling Louisiana Medicaid’s toll-free hotline at 888-342-6207.
People with disabilities, and people aged 55 and over who have been affected by Hurricanes Katrina or Rita, who have been notified that their Louisiana Medicaid benefits may be terminated may call the Advocacy Center, 800-960-7705, to see if we can assist.
Others can call Southeast Louisiana Legal Services at (877) 521-6242.
Forwarded from Project Katrina:
Child Support Enforcement Hotline…………….(877) 696-6775
For single moms due support, the US Department of Health and Human Services will send them a free handbook complete with excellent advice and all their local contact numbers for help.
Child-Care Subsidy Hotline………………………(800) 424-2246
When daycare costs are too high, there is help. The National Association of Child Care Resources is a federally funded agency. They provide helpful information about assistance in your client’s local area. They will help your caller find all options for child care payment assistance program.
Mortgage Payment Assistance …………………..(800) 750-8956
For families falling behind on mortgage payments, this national agency will work with your client’s mortgage company to arrange a workout plan to catch up missed payments. Housing counselors will discuss all options available to avoid foreclosures. Agency does not make loans or buy property.
Debt Relief Hotline……………………………….(800) 291-1042
For families struggling with credit card debts (typically over $10,000);relief is available. This national agency will contact your client’s creditors, reduce payments, interest, and even principal amounts owed. Harassing collection calls will stop.
Free Bankruptcy Advice …………………………(800) 379-0985
Families who cannot use other debt solution may need to speak with an attorney. The nation’s largest consumer law firm has made this hotline available. Your client may call for a free conversation to discuss whether debt relief under bankruptcy makes sense for them.
Discount Prescriptions ………………………….. (800) 291-1206
Families can save between 20% and 40% on their prescription medications. No exam needed. National program. No need to make trips to the pharmacy, medication shipped to the home. Call for free information.
Great news from a Been There Clearinghouse reader, Mary in NOLA:
Rocky & Carlo’s is coming back! Frank Davis interviewed ‘em for Channel 4 and they’ve got sheetrock (for those not in NOLA, this is a rebuilding milestone celebrated with great enthusiasm, similar to, say, baby’s first steps, you take pictures, share ‘em with everyone who cares and even with some who don’t, and they are all happy for you).
Check out www.wwltv.com.
- Mary in NOLA
Anyone with photos, send them to us by email: cooper.and.emily@mac.com and we will post them here!
Emily and I will never know what it was like to face Katrina head on, to live through the Superdome, to hang for dear life from a roof top, or to wade through a river that was once a street. We did not feel what it was like to not know how - or where - our family was; or the despair of losing a home, a job, a lifetime of treasures and a way of life.
We do know that even though we were hundreds of miles away, safe and dry, Katrina changed both of us, forever.
Katrina changed us because of all of you. It was a year ago today we built this site and it is one of the best things either one of us has ever done. Each and every one of you has inspired us and taught us lessons of hope, strength, generosity and love.
Last night I had the honor of attending, with my dad, a prayer service to mark the one year anniversary of the storm at Manna From on High Ministries in East Pittsburgh, PA. It was a beautiful service and I am still overcome by the amazing music and voices I heard. Recording artist Anita Levels sang two of her songs, “Restore the Soul” and “Change Comin’” and all I can say is: get her CD. She is a true and brilliant talent. Also, the singing group Agape performed and if you know of their website, please send it to me so I can post it here. They are incredible. It was a joy to meet so many wonderful people.
Lurline Cadogan, Chairperson of the Gulf Coast Connection here in Pittsburgh and in Philadelphia, spoke at the end of the service about her belief that the next time something like Katrina strikes, people will be prepared. But, she has learned, the power to survive and thrive depends on two things: knowledge and love. Lurline asked everyone there last night to get a copy of the U.S. Constitution and read it, to fully understand our rights and responsibilities as citizens of the United States. I promised I would post a link to the Constitution on this site: Click Here. The Constitution’s Preamble is as follows:
The Constitution of the United States Preamble
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
Thank you all for everything you have done. A year has gone by, and it is not over yet. We are here as long as you need us.
If you are displaced by Katrina and living in Los Angeles, or would like to help those who are, please click here.
On the one year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, leading online parenting website www.momready.com, is reaching out to evacuees in Los Angeles. Through their site, Katrina evacuees currently living in L.A. can connect with individual donors locally and around the world in an online public forum.
momready.com is offering this opportunity for their readers to offer assistance via a special section called “Make A Difference” on their www.momready.com. By posting their offerings online, readers can reach out to evacuees, who in turn can respond and receive the items and services offered. Evacuees can also post their specific needs for donors to respond to.
Since the hurricane, over 5,000 people displaced by Katrina have found a home in Los Angeles, the headquarters of momready.com. One year later, these families and individuals are still desperately trying to rebuild their lives.
momready founder Elisa Taub will be participating in the Katrina Anniversary Event organized by the L.A. County Area Long Term Recovery Committee this Saturday, August 26th from 10am - 2pm at the Downtown Salvation Army Building located at 906 Francisco Street, Los Angeles. If you are in Los Angeles, please stop by!
LINK:
http://www.momready.com/katrinaresource.asp
CONTACT:
Yvonne Wolf
818-995-1046
Yvonne@momready.com
So, if you are in another area and think people should be fine, as it has been a year(I recently had someone tell me I should quit using Katrina as an excuse,) I personally will tell you that many like me are hard working people who are doing everything they can to get back to “normal” or at least pre-Katrina normal. While some people may have milked the system, most of us are just overwhelmed and asking for human kindness and a helping hand. I still have 7 people in my home ranging in age from 54(me) to a 2 yr old. Katrina threw us for a loop and it has been one thing after another since the hurricane and, yet, I get up every day and go to work and ask God to help me make it through the day.
I still see blue roofs, trees down, and, in my case, am still trying to restock freezers that were full when Katrina hit. So, if you ever thought to judge anyone in the affected area, please take it from a survivor: Don’t, because the majority are just like me and still trying to recover. All we ask is for your prayers, and if you can help someone, do it. I promise you it will come back to you someday. If you have never watched the movie “Pay it Forward,” please do. Helping people is a circle and if you help someone today someday, someone will be there to help you.Please take time out of your scheduled to watch some of the specials to be aired on the anniversary of Katrina, as it will show you what is still going on. Spike Lee has a documentary on New Orleans on HBO on August 29th, along with others. Take the time to watch, and have your children watch. There is no better time to teach your children the art of giving than right now, and if you do not know who to help, this site is full of people. May god bless each and every one of you, whether you are someone helping or someone being helped. And for all the survivors of Katrina, we made it through the first year and hopefully next year will be better.
From a fellow survivor (and proud of it),
Barbara
Bgvis115@yahoo.com
Spike Lee is releasing “When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts,” his four-hour documentary on HBO this month.
The New York Times reviewed it today. Here’s a quote that got me:
‘“Levees” started out as a two-hour, $1 million film. HBO executives looking for a Hurricane Katrina project snapped it up. Mr. Lee and his crew were able to get into New Orleans after Thanksgiving, Mr. Lee said, and he quickly realized that he needed two more hours and $1 million more to give the story a full airing. He got it.
“Sheila Nevins, the film’s executive producer and the president of the documentary and family division at HBO, said “Levees” was an easy sell, at both prices. ‘“I realized this would be the film of record,” she said.
If HBO will let us post a clip from the film here, we will.
Hundreds, if not thousands, of people affected by Katrina and Rita have found a home in Philadelphia. We are happy to announce that we have added a tab to the Clearinghouse for Gulf Coast citizens who have relocated to Philly and the people of Philly, and elsewhere, who want to help them.
Please use the “Philadelphia” tab above to post a need if you are relocated to Philly, or, to post a message if you want to help out.
Emily and I recently returned from Amherst, Mass. where we attended the first annual Media Giraffe conference, “Democracy & Independence: Sharing News & Information in a Connected World” and talked about all of you here at the Clearinghouse.
We sat on a panel with the amazing Jon Donley, the esteemed, Pulitzer prize-winning editor of NOLA.com. The three of us talked about Katrina, Jon’s experience covering the disaster from a bunker in New Orleans, and our experience of creating the Been There Clearinghouse. The title of our talk was “How Katrina Changed the News Ecology.”
According to Bill Densmore, the organizer of the conference (which was superbly done,) the conference itself was centered, in part, on the question: are the motivations of a journalist like Jon to do what he does any different than the motivations of bloggers like us to do what we do? Jon said he entered journalism to do what he can to make the world a better place. I think Em and I would answer the same, especially when it comes to the Clearinghouse.
The conference filmed the session, and, for those of you who have, say, a spare 90 minutes, click here.
Emily, Jon and me:
Two moms (with six kids between us) and a network of bloggers and other people online made a lot happen with the Clearinghouse. That means right now, any one, in any place can use the internet do the same — to help people in need, raise awareness of an issue or motivate people to seek social change. No matter what the circumstances are, what kind of government is in place or what the “authority figures” tell us about how things are “usually” done, there is no doubt, whatsoever, in our minds that one by one, through the internet, we can do significant and important things to make the world a better place.
We received this important information about Louisiana housing grants today from Sharon Juli of Project Katrina:
“You may want to post this on your web site. It was forwarded it to me from the director of our project.”
Here is the link - Louisiana Rebuilds Info (The Road Home.)
What is The Road Home? The Road Home Housing Program is a plan developed by the office of Governor Kathleen Blanco and the Louisiana Recovery Authority. This plan aims to use Community Development Block Grants to provide grants of up to $150,000 to Louisiana homeowners who owned real estate damaged by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
Please check out the link above and come back and let us know your feedback.
As a new hurricane season approaches, we must not forget about those who were affected by last years devastating storms. Many of these people are still having problems getting their lives back on track and the disruption of a new storm season may cause them more anxiety that will only complicate their efforts to rebuild and reinvigorate their lives.
Along with this new anxiety, and the struggle to rebuild, many storm evacuees are still migrating throughout our country, seeking new places to call home. If these people are forgotten about or pushed aside when the next big event happens, the human tragedy surrounding last years storm season will increase immensely. That is why we must not let current events block out our memories of past ones.
Project Katrina, Pennsylvania Responds, is a FEMA funded grant program that aims to identify Hurricane Katrina and Rita evacuees residing in a sixteen county area in Western Pennsylvania. There is also our sister project, Project Thrive, that serves a five county area in the Eastern part of Pennsylvania.
We can be reached, toll free, 24/hours per day, 7/days per week at 1-800-292-3866. You can also visit us on the web at http://www.ccrinfo.org/katrinaproject. We encourage anyone out there affected by last year’s storm season to call in today so that we can provide you with any support you need to start rebuilding your life.
Sincerely,
Sharon B. Juli, LSW
Project CoordinatorRev. Yarbrough sent us this link to an interactive, moment-by-moment reenactment of the flooding in New Orleans the day Katrina hit. It makes clear in the most visual of ways how devastating - and immediate - the destruction was.
It just makes my heart ache.
http://www.nola.com/katrina/graphics/flashflood.swf
Yesterday I had the honor of attending a meeting of The Gulf Coast Connection here in Pittsburgh, an association of about 200 former residents of the Gulf Coast who relocated to Western PA after Katrina and Rita.
The Gulf Coast Connection is run by a force of nature named Lurline Cadogan, a resident of New Orleans until Katrina hit. Since it seems Pittsburgh is the first and only city to organize Gulf Coast evacuees into an association of this type, Ms. Cadogan has been invited to help other regions create similar groups. The first city she is helping is Philadelphia, with over 1,000 evacuees of their own.
Please click on the Pittsburgh tab, as many of the Gulf Coast Connection members here in Pittsburgh have posted items and services of which they are in need. Please note that jobs, rent-to-own homes and counseling services are among the requests.
At the meeting was a wonderful man named Dave Sevick, who, among many other things, co-runs a group that refurbishes used computers (Mac and some PCs) and provides them at a very low cost to those who are in need of a computer system and can’t afford one. Mr. Sevick, along with Bob Donaldson (another great guy), have coordinated the refurbishment and shipping of hundreds of computers to the Gulf Coast in the past couple months. Mr. Sevick announced at the meeting yesterday that he currently has numerous computers available for the Gulf Coast evacuees in Pittsburgh, should they need a system. Dave Sevick is an amazing person and what he is doing is truly inspirational. For more information on Mr. Sevick and his program visit The North Pittsburgh Macintosh Users Group website.
Dave Sevick and his group are a beautiful example of how one-on-one connections make it all happen when we are trying to help each other!
The devastation suffered by the citizens of the Gulf Coast is not going away anytime soon. Lives and livelihoods were washed away overnight. But, the thing is, even if it took just hours to be yanked away, rebuilding lives can, and will, take years. Please do what you can by searching through this site and seeing if there is any way you can help. If you are interested in setting up a Gulf Coast Connection in your region, or you have any questions about the group, contact Lurline Cadogan through the Gulf Coast Connection web site (link here).
Rev. Yarbrough of Plaquemine, LA sent us this video. The pictures and music say it all.
I have an article in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette today about an amazing person, the Rev. Marlon Yarbrough, who is doing what he can, through his own initiative, to help his friends, family and neighbors in New Orleans. Click here for a link to that piece.
The Reverend is doing what many of the “institutions” are not - helping small, home-based businesses in the Ninth Ward of New Orleans - a beauty parlor, a print shop, a graphics business, a daycare. He is seeking in-kind donations and seed money to get the businesses back on their feet. It is truly inspiring and wonderful – and progress is already being made!
In the next few weeks, trucks driven by representatives of the Western PA Methodist Center will deliver to those businesses computers refurbished by the North Pittsburgh Macintosh Users Group. For more information on the group’s Gulf Coast outreach visit www.thecenterforhope.com.
Just yesterday a top hairstylist in Pittsburgh offered the beauty parlor (Elka’s Beauty Expressed) three of his salon chairs. Now we just have to find a way to ship them.
To see the list of in-kind donations the Rev. has identified for the small businesses he is helping, click on the “Small Businesses” tab above or click here.
Reverend Yarbrough can be reached by email: info@yarbroughministries.com or through his website: www.yarbroughministries.com
Since we started the Clearinghouse, Emily and I have made a commitment to sticking to what we are doing here, focusing on getting help to those who lost so much in the hurricanes and staying away from the politics of the situation. Having just returned from New Orleans I can’t stay quiet anymore. What is happening in that city is so very, desperately wrong.
Guided by Reverend Marlon Yarbrough, a native of New Orleans, as well as a minister and practicing lawyer, we toured the most devastated areas of that city, mainly the 9th Ward.
Six months later, not much, if anything, has been done, let alone cleaned up or rebuilt. The housing aid is locked up in the legislative process and families are struggling, through their own initiative alone, to put their lives back together. Our government has failed thousands of people. Americans are being treated like they don’t matter, that their lives and routines and culture and neighborhood don’t matter.Yesterday I had an interesting talk with Dr. Ron Peters, professor of Urban Ministry at the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, and he compared the barely half-hearted attempts to help the victims of Katrina to 9/11.
“Remember how careful they were to exhume the remains of the victims of 9/11? I hear in the news they are still finding bodies in New Orleans. It is not right. It is beyond disrespectful. Why has the concern we as a nation had for the victims of 9/11 turned to such callousness? The people in the Gulf Coast are no more or no less deserving,” Dr. Peters said.What can we do? Well, Reverend Yarbrough has an answer, and all of you do too. The only real progress we can make is by helping the victims of Katrina and Rita ourselves, working one to one, person to person. Just like what is happening here at the Clearinghouse. Reverend Yarbrough is working to revitalize small businesses, obtaining in-kind donations and seed money to get the businesses off their feet. I have a story about his endeavor running in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on Sunday. Please visit the new section of our site, ”Small Businesses,” to see the list of in-kind donations needed by the small businesses the Rev. has identified. Click here or the tab above.
We can help pull lives back together again; it just will have to be one person at a time. Given the government’s inability and disregard of this horrible catastrophe, person to person is the best we can do.
Because of each of you - those who come to this site looking for a little help and those who offer it - the Been There Clearinghouse has been named the Most Inspirational Blog of 2005 by the Best of Blog Awards. Emily and I are inspired every day by you and for that reason it is to you we dedicate this award.
We wanted to share this article that ran in the Larchmont Gazette last week about the Clearinghouse.
What a breathe of fresh air it was to find out about your website on the Larchmont Gazette. I live in Larchmont, and was helping Jana, a young woman who grew up in our town who had been living with her husband in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. Her husband Craig O’Brian is a Coast Guard helicopter pilot, stationed in New Orleans. Craig and his fellow Coasties selflessly rescued thousands of stranded people, often jeopardizing their own lives. Jana and Craig house were flooded as well and they lost everything.
Sunday evenings, the Weather Station has been televising a series on the Coast Guard Helicopter pilots and their Hurricane Katrina rescue. Craig O’Brian, this Sunday will be featured in their story. I hope people will tune in and watch this show. I believe there will be three more episodes.
When Jana was here, I had so much difficulty getting her help. I am not sure of the reason.
I know that Craig and his unit need all the thanks that we can give them. When I viewed the show last week, I realized how traumatized these Coast Guard Pilots were after having to make the decision of whom they would take, and who they had to leave behind. One pilot spoke about having to split up a family, and left the father on a roof after evacuating his children and wife. There was no more room for him, and when they returned to get him, he wasn’t there and they never found out what happened to him.
For those who would like to see one of our own residents, and what she and her husband faced during Hurricane Katrina, tune in on Sunday night at 8 p.m., to the Weather Station.
Here’s an article that ran today in the Pittsburgh Herald about the Clearinghouse, and all that’s going on for the 400 people who’ve moved to Pittsburgh after Katrina forced them from their homes. Wait til you read about some of the imaginative ways that Pittsburghers are welcoming and taking care of their new arrivals!
We wish all of you a happy, healthy and hopeful New Year and want to send our love, hugs and thanks to all of you who visit the Been There Clearinghouse and participate either as donors or recipients. We continue to be amazed and touched by all of you and wish you all the very best! Keep us posted on how you are and we look forward to hearing from all of you again and again. Thank you so much for being a part of this site and we look forward to a great 2006.
We have added a new tab titled “Pittsburgh,” since almost 400 people who were displaced by Katrina have relocated to that city, and many of them could use our assistance.
Please click on that tab if you are a “new” Pittsburgher, here because of the hurricane, and post there if you have a need, a request or a question. If you are willing to offer help, we invite you to post in that section as well.
More information can be found by clicking the “Pittsburgh” tab above (right) and scrolling down to where you can enter your name, email and your offer or request.
If you are new to the Been There Clearinghouse, this article provides some good background on how the site came about.
Cooper and I don’t always know what is going on behind the scenes here in the Clearinghouse because people in need contact donors directly, so it is particularly heart-warming to read a comment like this one that came in today. Please think of this note as a personal thank you to every one of you who has given through the Clearinghouse:
“The Jenkins family would like to send out a deep heartfelt “THANKS” to all those that came to help in their time of need. After about a week of putting the word out, they have been overwhelmed with phone calls and non-stop deliveries. We thank everyone’s efforts and we would also recommend this website to all those still in need. And I’d like to add that this family has been instrumental in their own success for the future. They have jobs and are searching for their own home in the near future.
“Thanks again and God Bless.”
Following is a list of evacuees who need items, with their sizes, given to us by the pastor of a church in Plaquemine, LA.
From Pastor Yarbrough: The evacuees listed below lived primarily in East New Orleans and have lost all of their possessions. Their homes were totally destroyed by destructive winds or flood water. Many were renters and only 4 have the applicable insurance coverage to offset their losses. Your generosity and acts of kindness are deeply appreciated and truly the result of answered prayers. Again, thank you for your acts of kindness and expressions of love in our time of need. God Bless!
To view the list and where to send items, click here:
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Please send items to evacuees in care of:
Pastor Marlon N. Yarbrough
17512 Beachwood Avenue
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70817
email: yarbroughllc@cox.net
EVACUEE-SURVIVORS
Robert Coleman (AGE 32) David-John Davis (AGE 12)
Pants 42 X 34 IN SEAM Pants 32 X 30
Shirts 3X or 4X Shirts MEDIUM ADULT
Coats 4X Coats MEDIUM ADULT
Shoes 11 Shoes 8 ½ -9 MENS
Undershorts 3X Undershorts SMALL MENS
T shirts 4X T shirts MEDIUM ADULT
Socks 11-13 Socks 9-11 ADULT
Jeremy Coleman (AGE 5) Courtney Coleman (AGE 9)
Pants 7 Pants 10
Shirts 8-10 Shirts 12-14
Coats 10 Coats 14
Shoes 12 Shoes 11 ½
Undershorts 8 Undershorts 10
T shirts 10 Braziers TRAINING BRA
Socks 12 Dresses 12
Socks 12
Stockings 12-14
Kim Coleman (AGE 32) Moeshia Tobias (AGE 16)
Pants 11-12 Pants 6-8 JUNIOR
Shirts LARGE Shirts LARGE
Coats LARGE Coats LARGE
Shoes 6-6 ½ Shoes 7-7 ½
Undershorts 8 Undershorts 5
Braziers 36B Braziers 36C
Dresses 12 Dresses 6-8
Socks 6-11 Socks AVERAGE B
Stockings PETIT LARGE Stockings 6-11
Ashaka Tobais (AGE 14) Joel Butler (AGE 49)
Pants 3 JUNIOR Pants 14
Shirts SMALL Shirts X-LARGE
Coats MEDIUM Coats X-LARGE
Shoes 6-6 ½ Shoes 9
Undershorts JUNIOR 2-3 Undershorts 6
Braziers 34A Braziers 38B-C
Dresses 3 Dresses 16-18
Socks 6-11 Socks 6-11
Stockings PETIT A Stockings QUEEN 1X
LaToya Butler (AGE 28) Andryetta Yarbrough (AGE 68)
Pants 13 Pants 18
Shirts LARGE Shirts X-LARGE
Coats LARGE Coats X-LARGE
Shoes 8 Shoes 9 ½
Undershorts 7 Undershorts 8
Braziers 36C Braziers 38C
Dresses 14 Dresses 18
Socks 9-11 Socks 9-11
Stockings QUEEN A Stockings E-F
Elka Yarbrough (AGE 36) Ayra Yarbrough (AGE 38)
Pants 26 Pants 16-18 WOMENS
Shirts 3XL Shirts X-LARGE
Coats 3XL Coats X-LARGE
Shoes 8 ½ Shoes 9 ½
Undershorts 10-12 Undershorts 7-8
Braziers 42DD Braziers 38B
Dresses 26 Dresses 16
Socks 9-11 Socks 9-11
Stockings QUEEN 5X-6X Stockings QUEEN 1X
Lester Reed (AGE 63) Bobbie Reed (AGE 57)
Pants 38W Pants 8
Shirts XL Shirts 8
Coats XL Coats 8
Shoes 10 ½ M Shoes 8 ½ -9
Undershorts 36-38 Undershorts 5
T shirts XL Braziers 34B
Socks 10-13 Dresses 8
Socks 8-13
Stockings B
Kim Reed (AGE 31) Darlene Petit (AGE 40)
Pants 8 WOMENS Pants 14-16 WOMENS
Shirts LARGE - MEDIUM Shirts LARGE - X-LARGE
Coats LARGE Coats X-LARGE
Shoes 8 ½ - 9 ½ Shoes 8 ½
Undershorts 5 SMALL Undershorts 6 LARGE Hi-cut brief
Braziers 36D Braziers 40C
Dresses 8 Dresses 16
Socks 9-11 Socks 9-11
Stockings B Stockings E-F
Geraldine Coleman (AGE 59) Michelle Toney (AGE 32)
Pants 10 Pants 14
Undershorts 5 Shirt 14 X LARGE
Socks 6-11 Shoes 9 ½ - 10
Shirts 12 Undershorts 6
Braziers 36B Braziers 38C
Stockings PETIT AVERAGE Dresses 14
Shoes 7 ½ -8 Socks 9 - 12
Dresses 12 Stockings E - F
Coats 12 Coats 14
MaKala Toney (AGE 6) Katrina Johnson (AGE 32)
Pants 7-8 Pants 9
Shirts 7-8 Shirts Medium
Coats 8 Coats Medium
Shoes 1 ½ Shoes 8 ½
Undershorts 5 Undershorts 5
Braziers 36B Braziers 36B
Dresses 9 Dresses 9
Socks 5 - 10 Socks 9 - 12
Stockings PETIT A Stockings QUEEN A
Raven Johnson (AGE 14) Dayvon Johnson (AGE 8 )
Pants 14-16 Pants 10-12
Shirts 14-16 Shirts 10-12
Coats 16 Coats 12
Shoes 8 Shoes 5
Undershorts 14-16 Undershorts 8
Braziers 34A Socks LARGE BOYS
Dresses 14-16 T Shirts MEDIUM ADULT
Socks 9-12
Stockings PETIT
Hollis Johnson (AGE 13) Kice Johnson (AGE 3)
Pants 14-16 Pants 3 T
Shirts 14-16 Shirts 3 T
Coats 16 Coats 4 T
Shoes 8 Shoes 7 ½
Undershorts 14 Undershorts 3 T
T shirts MEDIUM ADULT T shirts 8
Socks LARGE BOYS Socks MEDIUM TODDLERS
Elenor Y. Richardson (AGE 70) Rochelle Richardson (AGE 45)
Shirts 42 - 2X Shirts 18 - X-LARGE
Coats 42 Coats 18 - X-LARGE
Dress 22 Dress 18
Pants 22 Pants 16-18
Brazires 44D Braziers 42DD
Shoes 10 MEDIUM FLAT HEEL Shoes 9
Socks 9 -12 Socks 9-12
Stockings 3X - SUPPORT HOSE (M) Stockings 1-X
Undershorts 10 Undershorts 8
Mary Lucille Elzie (AGE 85) Keith Thibadeaux (AGE 42)
Shirts MEDIUM 12-14 Shirt 16 LARGE
Coats 14 Coats X-LARGE
Dress 8 Pants 36 - 34 LONG
Pants 6 Undershorts X-LARGE
Brazires 36C Socks 10-12
Shoes 8 ½ NARROW Shoes 10 ½
Socks 9 -12 T Shirts LARGE
Stockings MEDIUM
Undershorts 5-6
Alicia Thibodeaux (AGE 44) Jasmine Brown (AGE 22)
Shirts LARGE Shirts LARGE
Coats X-LARGE Coats X-LARGE
Dress 16 Dress 18
Pants 16 Pants 34
Braziers 38B Braziers 34B
Shoes 7 ½ Shoes 8 ½
Socks 7 -9 Socks 7-9
Stockings MEDIUM Stockings MEDIUM
Undershorts 7 Undershorts 7
Ronald C. Richardson (AGE 49) Dinah S. Cain (AGE 48)
Shirts 17-X-LARGE Shirts 10
Pants 34W-36L Pants 10
Undershorts LARGE Undershorts 6
Coats LARGE Dress 10
Socks 11-12 Shoes 7 ½
Shoes 12 Socks 9-12
T Shirts LARGE Braziers 36C
Stockings 2 MEDIUM
Coats 12
Darrell Edwards (AGE 48) Michelle Edwards (AGE 40)
Shirts 2 X-LARGE Shirts 12-14 LARGE Maternity 6 MO.
Pants 34 Pants 14
Coats 44 Shoulder Coats LARGE
Undershorts 36 Undershorts 7
Shoes 9 ½ Brazier 38C
Socks LARGE Stockings TALL
T Shirts 38-40 LARGE Dress 14
Shoes 9 ½
Socks 9 - 11
Linda Hill (AGE 58) Charles Hill (AGE 59)
Shirts 16-LARGE Shirts 14 ½ MEDIUM
Pants 16 Pants 30W
Coats LARGE Coats 42 LONG
Undershorts 8 Undershorts 34
Brazier 38D Shoes 11 ½
Stockings E Socks 12-13 LARGE
Dress 16 T Shirts 38-40 LARGE
Shoes 9 ½ NARROW
Socks 9 - 11
When the church down the street in Crowley took in over 100 people (not a big church either), I knew I must do something to help. I took them some children’s clothes, children’s videos and towels. When I got there, I met a man that needed to go to the social security office. I told him I would take him and who ever else needed to go. I did that and they were able to get
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