Los Angeles Pierce College Serving as a Red Cross Evacuation Center What began as a simple ask turned into a community affair

Similar documents
#askfye LSU_FYE

WHAT IS THE MEDICAL SPECIAL NEEDS SHELTER?

LAVC College Bulletin August 29-September 4, 2010

Welcome to Cedars-Sinai PATIENT AND FAMILY GUIDE

CITY OF NORCO An Equal Opportunity Employer EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

CHAPTER V: UNIT ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

Welcome to the children s Ward

As you look through these profiles, we hope that we can once again count on your generosity during this season of giving.

COMPREHENSIVE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT PLANNING CRITERIA FOR HOSPICE

Football Booster Meeting Minutes 7/18/2017

Ready? Is Your. Family. Dear neighbors,

CONVERTING VOLUNTEER PROSPECTS INTO DEDICATED VOLUNTEERS: A PEER EXPERIENCE EXCHANGE WEBINAR

Introduction to Orientation

MCKINNEY BOYD FOOTBALL

EMERGENCY PLANNING FOR FAMILIES

LIVING CHARITY VOLUNTEER PROGRAM. Nov 7-12, 2016 NEW ORLEANS

NEW HORIZONS SUMMER FUN CAMP 2017 DAILY SCHEDULES

Care Plan. I want to be communicated to in a way I can understand. I would like to be able to express my needs and wants

Welcome to St Brigid s Ward

CALIFORNIA PHYSICAL EDUCATION WORKSHOP INFORMATION BOOKLET

PASSPORT UNIVERSITY OF MARY ROME CAMPUS

2017 VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES

When a devastating tornado strikes your house. stranded in a dark basement for days, will. water to last? leaving you and your family

Summer Bridge 2015 Arrival Packet

LANDBOUSKOOL VRYHEID AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL HOSTEL RULES

If you don't see the Food Pantry Logo above this panel, click on "Display Images" at the top of this . Thank you!

Orientation Schedule Winter 2013

The director s letter that you ve received in this has more details.

PARTICIPANT & LEADER GUIDE. Fifth Annual DULANEY DISTRICT Towson Merit Badge University & Service Weekend September 23-24, 2017

in deep water Real-life story! And what you can do to be a survivor!

PLANNING FOR ARRIVAL. CURIE Academy STAFFING & SUPERVISION

Glo-Bull Beginnings Week Schedule Overview

Plan for an Emergency

Arkansas Regional Adventure Programming Conference

All About Discovery! Cooperative Extension Service College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences

2016 Community Report

2017 EVERGREEN COUGAR BASEBALL SPRING TRIP PACKET PHOENIX, ARIZONA MARCH 26-APRIL 1, 2017

HURRICANE HIGH SCHOOL BAND CAMP, SUMMER 2012

Forest Landowners Retreat Information

FC Bayern South ID Residential Camp Handbook

VOLUNTEERS MAKE A DIFFERENCE!!

Osprey Welcome Week 2010 New Student Schedule of Events Wednesday, September 1 Monday, September 6

Food and Fund Drive Coordinator s Kit

2017 Youth Leadership Conference Youth Guide University of Waterloo Waterloo, Ontario August 16-19, 2017

On The Road Again 2017 Jr. High Choir Tour July 26, July 30, 2017

Prepared Childbirth Class Weeknights: $175 per couple; Weekends: $200 per couple

WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL MARCHING BAND 2018 INFORMATION PACKET

MENDING HEARTS TRANSITIONAL LIVING HOUSE RULES REVISED Restoring Women, Reclaiming Lives

Cabrini High Dads Club CALENDAR

Dear Friends: Choices: Heat or Food? More than 165,000 individuals living in Southern Colorado are food insecure. Empty Stocking Fund Reminder

Disaster Preparedness, A nurse leader s role: Hurricane Harvey. Emily Weber MS RN CPN NEA-BC Nursing Director. February 23, 2018

How the Food Bank Works

March 3, Dear Team Captain,

Preparing for Fall Sports Season

Congratulations! Thanks to extreme creativity, innovation and teamwork that your team has shown, you ve earned a spot at Global Finals!

Vacancies Vacancies can be viewed online- follow the Direct Payments link

Orthopaedic Waitlist Surgery

Love delivered daily. Love delivered daily. NEW PARENT. Handbook

STUDENT SCHEDULE <STUDENT NAME>

The following is a list of facilities/activities available for your use, as well as prices:

Spring 2017 Monroe Community College. Admissions

Food Waste & Hunger Summit Request for Proposals

Birth Center Tour. Information packet. To prepare for your stay with us, please print the Woman in Labor sign

The Salvation Army of Wake County Shelter Drive Toolkit

INTRODUCTION PROMOTING YOUR FOOD DRIVE

YOUR GUIDE TO ORIENTATION WEEK AT AUR

Augsburg University, Minneapolis

Group Organizers Let s Get Started!

Lafayette Lancer Regiment Band Camp. July 22nd 27 th 2018

BE PART OF THE BAND! An informational packet for prospective students and parents

2017 Turning Point District Fall Camporee

employee hurricane preparedness guide

TOWN OF BROOKFIELD, CONNECTICUT EMERGENCY OPERATIONS PLAN ANNEX "F" SHELTER/MASS CARE (ALL HAZARD) September 1, 2012

YOUTH PROGRAMS NEW PROGRAM

City of Los Angeles Dept. of Recreation and Parks

2018 SUMMERTIME ACTIVITIES for Hilltown Families & Children

HOST FAMILY APPLICATION & AGREEMENT

Campus-Specific Information: Stanford

About our Nicaragua Project Partner - Gran Pacifica Beach and Golf Resort

ACADEMIC CALENDAR

Boca Helping Hands Volunteer Opportunities

Bioterrorist Attack on Food: A Tabletop Exercise

Student Donation Drive Packet

Experience... Innovate... StartUp! Sunday, July 15th to Saturday, July 28th

October Service ProjectUpdate

GLOBAL, COMMUTER AND TRANSFER

community programs Camps, Sports Clinics & Lessons, and Community Events

Working for Wolves Friday, Saturday and Sunday May

DAILY PROGRAMS: Monthly Meetings. Bowling. Dominoes. Open Gym. Bocce. Pickleball

HOLIDAY INFORMATION BULLETIN

UNDERSTANDING COMMENCEMENT

My Journey Gap Year 2018

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH ACADEMIC CALENDAR

OAKHILL CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION

Sprouts is a healthy grocery store offering fresh, natural and organic foods at great prices. Based on the belief that healthy food should be

Amanda Dedrick Fountain Valley School of Colorado; Stanley H. King Counseling Institute

STEP 1: Identify a temporary meeting place outside your facility in case a sudden building-wide evacuation is necessary.

25 th Annual Duty to God and Country Celebration

Driving Directions to Mission Bay

Perú Flood Relief. May Reporting period: May 2017 Prepared by: Maria Fe Pujalt M. and Deanna Boulard

Transcription:

OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Los Angeles Pierce College Serving as a Red Cross Evacuation Center What began as a simple ask turned into a community affair The Hill Fire and the Woolsey Fire, pushed by Santa Ana Winds, have swept through tens of thousands of acres in Ventura and Los Angeles Counties with alarming speed, dislocating about 235,000 residents in our surrounding communities. On Thursday, November 8, 2018, at approximately 10:00 PM, the American Red Cross contacted Los Angeles Pierce College and asked if it could establish an Emergency Evacuation Center on campus. They initially thought the Center would draw between 60 and 100 people. In coordination with the Los Angeles County Sheriff s Department, arrangements were made, and Red Cross personnel began to arrive around 11:00 PM. At that time, we were asked if we might be able to take a few more evacuees who were being moved from a nearby Evacuation Center that had reached capacity.

By midnight, Los Angeles County had issued a mandatory evacuation order for tens of thousands of additional residents in nearby communities. This order, coupled with Ventura County s orders, included more than 80,000 individuals. By 1:00 AM, there were 800 evacuees at Pierce College. We opened one of our gyms, and then another, to take in our neighbors. By dawn, there were over 1,100 evacuees on our campus, either in one or the other of our two gyms, in our largest conference center, or just sleeping in their cars in one of our parking lots. With an ever-growing number of evacuees flowing onto campus, including many who were our own students, there grew an almost chaotic environment that caused us to grow concerned for the safety of the evacuees. In consultation with LACCD Chancellor Francisco Rodriguez, the campus was ordered closed for classes and activities on Friday.

Faculty and staff arriving Friday morning volunteered to assist and were pressed into service alongside the Red Cross. More than 250 faculty, staff, and students spent some, or part, of their holiday weekend serving and comforting the evacuees and provided support services for the Red Cross. We had several people who stayed on site for the first 22 hours straight. There were faculty and staff volunteering 12 and 18-hour shifts to make certain no one was hungry, cold, or left alone. As word spread that there were three Red Cross Evacuation Centers at Pierce, donations began coming in from local businesses. Ralphs Supermarkets sent an 18-wheeler from their distribution center in Riverside filled with food, hygiene products, and baby food. The Vons grocery chain provided badly needed fresh food and staples. The Home Depot sent pallets of bottled water and farm supplies. AT&T and T-Mobile parked mobile charging stations outside one of the gyms and passed out free communications equipment. And, State Farm set up pop-up tents and provided food and snacks at a critical juncture. Operation Blankets of Love provided bags of pet food and dog crates, local restaurants sent meals, and on and on. Neighbors, who have asked to remain anonymous, rolled through campus for four days asking what the evacuees needed, and returned later with cars and trucks filled with water, diapers, clothing, shoes, and toys.

The response from local officials was astonishing. Woodland Hills City Councilman Bob Blumenfield spent most of Saturday on campus, comforting those fleeing the fires, and, with his staff, collected donations of personal items including food, toiletries, and clothing. State Senator Henry Stern stayed on site much of Saturday evening where he toured the facilities and sat with evacuees, providing them updates and information regarding their towns and neighborhoods at the front line of the ongoing fire disaster. Early Sunday morning, Mayor Eric Garcetti made an unpublicized visit to the campus without media. He was scheduled for a ten-minute briefing with campus and Red Cross personnel. He stayed for nearly two hours. He met with evacuees, provided them with the most up-to-date fire evacuation information, and visited the residence halls where he and I talked with evacuees privately for much of the time he was on campus.

On Sunday, LACCD Chancellor Francisco Rodriguez visited campus and spoke to the evacuees at dinner. LACCD Board President, Michael Fong, toured the campus earlier on Monday, and Trustee Scott Svonkin visited with evacuees on Monday. I cannot begin to thank the Pierce staff to the degree they deserve. There are not words in the English language that can convey my depth of gratitude. The custodial staff at Pierce worked non-stop, keeping the restrooms and showers clean and stocked, and the common areas neat and tidy. Our Equestrian Center faculty and staff, in partnership with the City and County of Los Angeles, tended to evacuated horses and livestock around-the-clock. Faculty and staff directed people to appropriate facilities, unpacked donations, helped the Red Cross with serving meals, and of course, offered comfort and encouragement.

One story that sums up the past five days involves the Pierce College Men s Volleyball Team. On Saturday, the team arrived on campus to coordinate a trip to San Diego where they were scheduled to participate in an offseason tournament. When the coach and players gathered outside the gym, they found their practice facility packed with cots and frightened neighbors. The players changed their plans instantly. For the next two days, Coach Lance Walker and his players hauled water and food across campus and provided ride services for evacuees. A Sports Illustrated correspondent was on campus on Saturday covering how colleges and universities were responding to the fires. When the correspondent asked Coach Walker what had compelled his players to surrender their holiday weekend, he responded, Some things are more important than us playing volleyball. Equally amazing were the people of our community. Not only was there a steady stream of cars dropping off donations, but dozens stayed to volunteer their time and many coordinated further donations that came in from across the city. While the fires are still raging, and the need is still great, the spirit of service on our campus remains undiminished. Most of the evacuees have returned home, or in worse case scenarios, been moved to other temporary housing due to their homes having been destroyed. One of our shelters remains open, and we will continue to provide our assistance to the Red Cross until this crisis ends.

Classes resumed today with many tired faculty, staff, and administrators reaching deeper for the stamina to get through this week in service of our 11,000 regular students. There has been little time to share what has been happening here at Los Angeles Pierce College these past few days, but I m taking some bit of time now to share how proud I am of all who have come together here proving that Pierce College is not simply a college in its community; rather, it is the community s college. Best regards, Lawrence G. Buckley, PhD Los Angeles Pierce College Interim President If you wish to make a monetary donation, I ask that you consider contributing to the Pierce College Foundation and the American Red Cross of Los Angeles.