|
Top 5 Large Disaster Responses in 2002

On Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2002, Hurricane Lili churned through the Gulf of Mexico as a powerful Category 4 storm.
|
October 2002 (Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama). Cost: $15.8 million. Families assisted: 75,256.
Tropical Storm Isidore and Hurricane Lili slammed into the Gulf coastline with a powerful, one-two punch within one week of each other, causing widespread flooding and wind damage to tens of thousands of homes. Red Cross workers and supplies were positioned in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Arkansas weeks in advance of the impending storms, ready to respond. The Red Cross sheltered 20,820 people in 154 shelters in five states and served 1.3 million meals to people evacuated or displaced due to high winds and surging waters. Red Cross mental health workers provided crisis counseling to nearly 10,000 people suffering from stress related to the disasters.
|

Thousands of homes were inundated by flooding in southern and south central Texas through most of the summer of 2002.
|
March-October 2002. Cost: $13.5 Million. Families assisted: 25,448.
Of the 12 large-scale disaster relief operations in Texas this year, five required massive Red Cross resources. Over eight months, the central and southern parts of the state were repeatedly pounded with tornadoes and severe flooding. March brought floods and a tornado to central Texas, and another tornado ravaged the southwest part of the state in April. In July, catastrophic floods in the Hill Country near Austin and San Antonio affected tens of thousands. Tropical Storm Fay hit the Texas coast in September, and south-central Texas was once again rocked by floods and tornadoes in October. Altogether, the Red Cross assisted 25,000-plus families with disaster-caused needs, served 464,000 meals, provided emotional support to more than 11,000 individuals and sheltered 1,700 displaced residents.
|

Arizona's Rodeo and Chedisksi wildfires created a monster when they merged in late June, 2002. The blaze forced more than 30,000 people from their homes.
|
April-July 2002 (Arizona, Colorado, California, Oregon). Cost: $8.1 Million. Families assisted: 8,010.
Colorado recorded the largest fires in the last century as monster blazes swept through the Hayman and Durango regions and even threatened the outskirts of Denver. To the south, more than 650,000 acres across the state of Arizona were consumed as fires in the Mogollon Rim area came together and forced the evacuation of almost 30,000 residents. Drought and low humidity in Oregon and California were also factors in a massive wildfire in the Siskiyou National Forest. By the time the fires were extinguished, 855 homes destroyed or damaged by blazes that some firefighters called the most challenging fires they had ever confronted. From the beginning, the Red Cross was providing disaster assistance and relief to thousands of residents forced to flee the flames. The Red Cross would open 50 shelters, serve over 720,000 meals and snacks, provide emotional support for more than 20,000 individuals and provide emergency health services to nearly 700 people affected by these disasters.
|

An outbreak of deadly tornadoes and severe storms rampaged across several states on November 10, 2002, killing more than 35 people and reducing hundreds of homes to piles of splintered wood and twisted metal.
|
November 2002 (Alabama, Ohio, Tennessee, Mississippi, Georgia, Pennsylvania, West Virginia). Cost: $3.7 Million. Families assisted: 3,939.
More than 35 people were killed when a band of storms spawning over 50 tornadoes rampaged across seven states on Veterans Day. Thousands of homes were literally shattered; more than 1,900 of the nearly 4,000 damaged homes were destroyed or suffered major damage. The Red Cross immediately mobilized hundreds of relief personnel to assist residents affected by the deadly twisters in Tennessee, Ohio, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Fifty-three Emergency Response Vehicles were deployed to the affected areas where workers served almost 250,000 meals and snacks to families and emergency workers. Red Cross Disaster Mental Health counselors provided crisis counseling for nearly 5,000 individuals, and caseworkers provided financial and other disaster-related assistance at 48 service centers.
|

Typhoon Chata'an crashed into Guam with winds and heavy rain on July 5, 2002, damaging buildings and downing power lines after passing through the Federated States of Micronesia, where it killed more than 30 people and injured more than 100 others.
|
July 2002 (Guam). Cost: $5.4 Million. Families assisted: 3,998.
In July, Typhoon Chata'an hit the northern part of Guam with wind gusts reaching 145 mph. The typhoon downed power lines, knocked out landline communications and left the entire island without power. The Marianas Islands also felt the devastating effects of Cha'taan. The Red Cross responded immediately, serving almost 40,000 meals and snacks to residents of 14 villages across the island and providing financial and other disaster assistance to more than 3,000 families. A disaster field service center -- stocked with lumber, clean-up kits and toiletries -- was quickly opened to provide residents with necessary items lost or destroyed by the typhoon. Red Cross Disaster Mental Health Services workers fanned out into the community to provide crisis counseling to almost 5,000 people affected by the storm.
|
All American Red Cross disaster assistance is free, made possible by voluntary donations of time and money from the American people. The Red Cross also supplies nearly half of the nation's lifesaving blood. This, too, is made possible by generous voluntary donations. You can help the victims of thousands of disasters across the country each year by making a financial gift to the American Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund, which enables the Red Cross to provide shelter, food, counseling and other assistance to those in need. You can make a secure online credit card donation or call 1-800-HELP NOW (1-800-435-7669) or 1-800-257-7575 (Spanish). Or you may send your donation to your local Red Cross or to the American Red Cross, P.O. Box 37243, Washington, D.C. 20013. To donate blood, please call 1-800-GIVE-LIFE (1-800-448-3543), or contact your local Red Cross to find out about upcoming blood drives.
|