Saw this response to a "what can we do" question - I don't know who
submitted it, but it makes sense. Just watch out for the scammers.


People want to help. That's good. The problem is they often can, but
they think they can. And, in the end, all they really do is get in the
way.
The single best thing Joe Geek can do is give cash. Not stuff, cash.
Cash is portable, fast, and useful. Everything else has problems --
even if it is something they really and truly need, because it isn't
there, and people and resources are needed to get it there.

The canonical example: Bottled water. Something otherwise useless that
is critical in this sort of emergency. So you give a few flats to the
ARC. Well, you bought them at retail, and now, the ARC has to put them
on a truck (which costs money) and ship them down there (which cost
money, and time.)

Let's say you give them $20 instead. The ARC notes that they need
water. So, they call a bottler in a city close to, but not affected
by, the storm. They get wholesale or cost prices, as opposed to
retail. For the same amount of money, they get far more water, far
closer to where they need to be. In six hours, you're delivering your
flats to the local ARC office. In six hours with cash, they're handing
water to people who desperately need it.

Finally, of course, if what they really need is food, your flats of
water aren't helpful, but your cash is. So, the lesson:

1) Give cash. That's the best thing you can do from your home. 

2) Stay the hell away from New Orleans. Seriously. They're ordering
everyone out, that includes you. Do not go.

3) If you are trained to do rescue work, they have almost certainly
called you by now. If not, check in with your local org -- records and
such get lost, and they may have missed you.

4) If you really insist, go to your *local* American Red Cross office
and talk to them. If, in fact, they do need a skill you have, they'll
put you with the people you need to know, and start the wheels moving.
The single biggest thing the ARC does in disasters is routing
solutions to problems.

5) If you have supplies, not cash, you can talk to the local office,
but realize that the cost of shipping your supplies may make them
worse off then just buying them closer. If you have supplies *and*
shipping -- and we're talking trucks, not FedEx, -- then call the
local ARC, and talk to them, and if they need what they have, they'll
put you in touch with the people who need it, who can arrange how to
get it to them.

In general, when they need something, they need lots of it, either in
one place or put into one place so they can easily distribute at need.
One satellite phone isn't that helpful, esp. if they have to figure
out how to make it work. A thousand phones, ready to go, however, is.

6) If they really need what you have to offer, and you are one of the
few who can provided it, they've probably called you by now.

7) If you want to help in the future, start working with rescue orgs
now. If you haven't been trained in general rescue procedures, your
not nearly as helpful. Think of it as backups -- you can't help New
Orleans now, but there will be other bad days, and if you've done the
classwork and drills, and kept in touch, then you will be one of the
people they need -- and they'll call you when they need you. It may
not be as elegant as network support -- but right now, they don't care
about TCP/IP. They care about getting people out of the floodwaters,
and plugging the holes in the levees.





-- 
OK Don, KD5NRO
Norman, OK 
'87 300SDL
'81 240D
'78 450SLC
The FSM created the Diesel Benz
http://www.venganza.org/

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