- Water—at
least a 3-day supply; one gallon per person per day
- Food—at
least a 3-day supply of non-perishable, easy-to-prepare food
- Flashlight
- Battery-powered or hand-crank radio (NOAA Weather Radio, if
possible)
- Extra
batteries
- First aid kit
- Medications
(7-day supply) and medical items (hearing aids with extra batteries,
glasses, contact lenses, syringes, etc.)
- Multi-purpose
tool
- Sanitation
and personal hygiene items
- Copies
of personal documents (medication list and pertinent medical
information, proof of address, deed/lease to home, passports, birth
certificates, insurance policies)
- Cell
phone with chargers
- Family
and emergency contact information
- Visit
http://www.redcross.org/prepare/disaster/winter-storm
for even more important items for your supply kit
Thursday, January 21, 2016
Winter Weather Supply Kit
Put Together a Supply Kit
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Top Ten Red Cross Cold Weather Safety Tips
As you're trying to stay warm this winter, the American Red Cross offers ten steps people can take to stay safe during the cold weather.
1. Layer up! Wear layers of lightweight clothing to stay warm. Gloves and a hat will help prevent losing your body heat.
2. Don’t forget your furry friends. Bring pets indoors. If they can’t come inside, make sure they have enough shelter to keep them warm and that they can get to unfrozen water.
3. Remember the three feet rule. If you are using a space heater, place it on a level, hard surface and keep anything flammable at least three feet away – things such as paper, clothing, bedding, curtains or rugs.
4. Requires supervision – Turn off space heaters and make sure fireplace embers are out before leaving the room or going to bed.
5. Don’t catch fire! If you are using a fireplace, use a glass or metal fire screen large enough to catch sparks and rolling logs.
6. Protect your pipes. Run water, even at a trickle, to help prevent your pipes from freezing. Open the kitchen and bathroom cabinet doors to allow warmer air to circulate around the plumbing. Be sure to move any harmful cleaners and household chemicals out of the reach of children. Keep the garage doors closed if there are water lines in the garage.
7. Better safe than sorry. Keep the thermostat at the same temperature day and night. Your heating bill may be a little higher, but you could avoid a more costly repair job if your pipes freeze and burst.
8. The kitchen is for cooking. Never use a stove or oven to heat your home.
9. Use generators outside. Never operate a generator inside the home, including in the basement or garage.
10. Knowledge is power. Don’t hook a generator up to the home’s wiring. The safest thing to do is to connect the equipment you want to power directly to the outlets on the generator.
For more information on how to stay safe during the cold weather, visit winter storm safety.
Monday, January 18, 2016
Regional Executive Corner with Joel R. Sullivan - January 2016
Storms Impacted Thousands of Homes; Red Cross Continues to Help
Last month, we experienced significant weather throughout Tennessee as tornadoes and floods created a path of destruction across the state. Red Cross workers left family and friends during the holidays to help those in need, a true representation of our mission and a testament to the amazing dedication our staff and volunteers have to serving others. While our local efforts in response to the December storms have come to a close, many other areas across the country are still recovering from severe weather. Officials report these storms destroyed or caused major damage to more than 2,500 homes in Missouri, Illinois, Texas, Mississippi, Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia.
Hundreds of Red Cross volunteers have shelters open and are providing meals, distributing comfort kits and clean-up supplies, providing health and mental health services and meeting with those affected to help them plan their next steps. Red Cross Emergency Response Vehicles are traveling through some affected neighborhoods, making sure people have food to eat and relief supplies.
New storms are causing flooding and landslides in California and Red Cross workers opened an evacuation center for people forced to leave their homes. The Red Cross has more shelters on stand-by if needed.
It is because of the amazing work of our staff and volunteers, the leadership of our Board members and the contributions from donors that we are able to serve these affected communities. Whether it’s a home fire, widespread flooding, or an ice storm, your support allows us to alleviate human suffering in the face of emergencies, big or small.
Thank you for all you do. I look forward to serving the community with you in 2016!
Last month, we experienced significant weather throughout Tennessee as tornadoes and floods created a path of destruction across the state. Red Cross workers left family and friends during the holidays to help those in need, a true representation of our mission and a testament to the amazing dedication our staff and volunteers have to serving others. While our local efforts in response to the December storms have come to a close, many other areas across the country are still recovering from severe weather. Officials report these storms destroyed or caused major damage to more than 2,500 homes in Missouri, Illinois, Texas, Mississippi, Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia.
Hundreds of Red Cross volunteers have shelters open and are providing meals, distributing comfort kits and clean-up supplies, providing health and mental health services and meeting with those affected to help them plan their next steps. Red Cross Emergency Response Vehicles are traveling through some affected neighborhoods, making sure people have food to eat and relief supplies.
New storms are causing flooding and landslides in California and Red Cross workers opened an evacuation center for people forced to leave their homes. The Red Cross has more shelters on stand-by if needed.
It is because of the amazing work of our staff and volunteers, the leadership of our Board members and the contributions from donors that we are able to serve these affected communities. Whether it’s a home fire, widespread flooding, or an ice storm, your support allows us to alleviate human suffering in the face of emergencies, big or small.
Thank you for all you do. I look forward to serving the community with you in 2016!
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
Letter from Southeast Tennessee Executive Director Julia Wright - January 2016
Happy New Year! 2016 started out with a not so gentle reminder to be ready for what Mother Nature can send our way. From tornadoes to flooding across the state, Red Cross staff and volunteers from the Southeast Tennessee chapter have stepped up to be there for our friends and neighbors in need.
If you haven’t made your New Year’s resolution to be prepared in 2016, it is not too late. While we have yet to experience any snow or ice, there is no better time to think about winter storm preparedness before it happens. At the American Red Cross we want your family to be prepared, so here are some quick tips to get you started:
• Assemble an Emergency Preparedness Kit to include winter-specific supplies for both home and vehicle that include a flashlight, first aid supplies, warm outerwear, water resistant boots, a blanket and extra warm clothing. Sand or non-clumping kitty litter is good to have on hand in case your car is stuck or to help make walkways less slippery. Additionally, your home kit should have essential medications, canned food and can opener, bottled water, and a battery powered radio with extra batteries in case of a power outage.
• Heed Storm Warnings: A winter storm WATCH means winter storm conditions are possible within the next 36 to 48 hours. People in a watch area should review their winter storm plans and stay informed about weather conditions via NOAA weather radio or local radio or television stations. A winter storm WARNING means that life-threatening, severe winter conditions have begun or will begin within 24 hours. Individuals in a warning area should take precautions immediately.
• Preparing Your Home and Car: If you heat with natural gas, be sure to identify the location of your meter and vents. It's important to keep them clear during storms and to ensure they are not damaged. Winterize your vehicle and keep the gas tank full, which helps prevent the fuel line from freezing. Make sure your home is properly insulated by installing storm windows or covering windows with plastic from the inside to help keep cold air out. Maintain heating equipment and chimneys by having them cleaned and inspected every year. Running water, even at a trickle, helps to prevent pipes from freezing.
Winter weather has a way of sneaking up on us, so now is a good time to take steps to reduce any weather-related issues. To learn more about how to prepare you family visit www.redcross.org/prepare/disaster/winter-storm.
--Julia
If you haven’t made your New Year’s resolution to be prepared in 2016, it is not too late. While we have yet to experience any snow or ice, there is no better time to think about winter storm preparedness before it happens. At the American Red Cross we want your family to be prepared, so here are some quick tips to get you started:
• Assemble an Emergency Preparedness Kit to include winter-specific supplies for both home and vehicle that include a flashlight, first aid supplies, warm outerwear, water resistant boots, a blanket and extra warm clothing. Sand or non-clumping kitty litter is good to have on hand in case your car is stuck or to help make walkways less slippery. Additionally, your home kit should have essential medications, canned food and can opener, bottled water, and a battery powered radio with extra batteries in case of a power outage.
• Heed Storm Warnings: A winter storm WATCH means winter storm conditions are possible within the next 36 to 48 hours. People in a watch area should review their winter storm plans and stay informed about weather conditions via NOAA weather radio or local radio or television stations. A winter storm WARNING means that life-threatening, severe winter conditions have begun or will begin within 24 hours. Individuals in a warning area should take precautions immediately.
• Preparing Your Home and Car: If you heat with natural gas, be sure to identify the location of your meter and vents. It's important to keep them clear during storms and to ensure they are not damaged. Winterize your vehicle and keep the gas tank full, which helps prevent the fuel line from freezing. Make sure your home is properly insulated by installing storm windows or covering windows with plastic from the inside to help keep cold air out. Maintain heating equipment and chimneys by having them cleaned and inspected every year. Running water, even at a trickle, helps to prevent pipes from freezing.
Winter weather has a way of sneaking up on us, so now is a good time to take steps to reduce any weather-related issues. To learn more about how to prepare you family visit www.redcross.org/prepare/disaster/winter-storm.
--Julia
Monday, January 11, 2016
Red Cross Nurses: Then and Now - Northeast Tennessee
by Red Cross Volunteer Jane Harris
Nurses have been a part of the American Red Cross since it was founded. Often Clara Barton, the first leader of the Red Cross in the US, is thought to have been a nurse. She was not a nurse, but did care for many during the Civil War. Red Cross nurses were, however, early volunteer and employee leaders in the organization. Nurses have maintained an important and continuing role in the work of the American Red Cross across the US. Two examples of that leadership follow:
Christine Triebe
Christine Baldwin Triebe (Chris) was born in England in 1904. In 1907 she came to America with her parents who settled in Johnson City, TN. She received her basic education in Johnson City Schools and the State Teacher’s College (which became ETSU). She became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1914 and graduated in 1926 from the Lankenau School of Nursing in Philadelphia.
Chris returned to Johnson City and assumed the position of night supervision at the Appalachian Hospital. In 1927, Christine came to Kingsport to become the Director of Nursing at the Marsh Clinic and Hospital Training School. She held that position until 1931 at which time the school voluntarily closed because it was too small to give adequate training to its students, according to the newer concepts for nursing education that were being developed in Tennessee. She married Edwin J. Triebe and made Kingsport her permanent home. She was an active volunteer nurse making a significant impact on health and professional nursing issues in Kingsport during the early to mid 1900s.
• At the Red Cross she served as Nursing Service Chairman and as a Board member, as trainer for Home Nursing Instructors across East Tennessee, as first instructor of Red Cross Nurses Aides for East Tennessee, and Red Cross First Aid and Home Nursing Instructor for over 20 years. One interesting aspect of her Red Cross work was conducting a survey to determine the needs for Visiting Nurse Services in Kingsport. The Visiting Nurse Service was an American Red Cross program that was a precursor of the United States Public Health Service.
• She was instrumental in recruitment of many nurses to volunteer with the local Red Cross.
• During the 1950’s when Civil Defense preparations were prominent across the country. Chris organized Home Nursing courses for all segments of the Kingsport community.
• She was active in the Parent Teachers Organization – as chairman of the Kingsport PTA Health Council she was responsible for a dental program and getting raincoats for the school safety patrol
• One of the lasting impacts of Chris’ community networking was beginning the Practical Nurse training Program in Kingsport. She brought together leaders to initiate the program, and then served as chairman of the Practical Nurse Committee of the Auxiliary at Holston Valley Hospital rendering guidance to the instructors and students.
• She rendered many hours of service in the well-baby clinics sponsored at the hospital
• She was active in the Girl Scouts- training 1000 Girl Scouts in Red Cross Home Nursing and Child Care
• She conducted investigations among needy families to determine eligibility for medical and surgical care sponsored by the Wednesday Club
• She instituted the first “Adult Education School” which taught the three R’s and the Red Cross Home Nursing to many women in the community
• She founded the Sullivan County Health Workers Group during WWII. Originally composed of members of Health Department, Office Nurses, Industrial Nurses, Lay leaders and physicians. This organization later became the Industrial Nurses Section of District V, Tennessee Nurses Association. She served in many local and state roles in the Tennessee State Nurses Association.
When the citizens of Kingsport needed assistance with solving community problems they instinctively turned to “Chris Triebe”. Her involvement with the Red Cross and other organizations enabled her to direct their thinking and attention to appropriate groups to help them. Her ability to network and share her knowledge of health care was definitely an asset to Kingsport and the Red Cross.
Carolyn Doerfert
More than 50 years after Christine Triebe shared her nursing skills in Kingsport many nurses have followed in her footsteps and served in numerous ways. One example is Carolyn Doerfert, who networks and volunteers in different but similar ways for the American Red Cross.
As much as our society changes – the Red Cross values and commitment to help remains the same.
Carolyn Doerfert uses her nursing and mental health knowledge often for the Red Cross. She may be preparing materials for an upcoming class or presentation or conferring about a current disaster case with other volunteers and staff. If she is not at the Chapter House she is online or on the phone taking care of the health services details for someone in need.
Carolyn loves sharing her professional skills with the Red Cross and has been doing so for many years. She graduated from the University of Rochester with a degree in psychology. She married her husband Gunther and came to the Kingsport area when her husband was transferred here from Eastman Kodak in Rochester. Kingsport was not unknown as her father had often visited here as a patent attorney. Soon after settling in Kingsport, she attended ETSU where she received an Associate Degree in Nursing. She then began a career in psychiatric nursing at Indian Path Pavilion.
One day at a business dinner, Carolyn met a gentleman from Nashville whose experiences as a Red Cross Disaster volunteer intrigued her. A call to the local Red Cross office and discussion with Jane Harris and Glenda Bobalik led her to what would become very much a “win-win” association for both Carolyn and the American Red Cross. She took basic disaster training, health services and mental health services classes and accepted her first assignment in 1998 – Hurricane George in Puerto Rico. She was hooked!
Carolyn has no idea how many disasters she has served on - too many to count she says – locally in northeast TN, across TN, or in states from west to east and north to south. Wildfires, floods, hurricanes, airline crashes and tornadoes are among the many disaster assignments she has accepted. While most often Carolyn works in Mental Health or Health Services, she has also accepted assignments in Casework and Staff Health. Carolyn loves feeling she has helped people in a time of great need, enjoys working with volunteers who share the same values, appreciates the high standards of our organization and loves continuing to learn. Carolyn is always learning from those she works with; as well as formally by completing certifications in Mental Health Nursing from American Nurses Association and National Disaster Nursing from St. Louis University.
Not only does Carolyn enjoy learning, she loves sharing her knowledge and love of Red Cross disaster with others. She has trained not only many of our current volunteer nurses in northeast TN, but others across TN and in many other states. She stays in touch with many of the individuals she trains and is a marvelous mentor and support for nurses during their first disaster assignments.
Carolyn is a good recruiter and trainer of volunteers, and helps network with other organizations in addition to the Red Cross. A few of the groups she has worked with recently include the TN Department of Health, the Prison System, and Indian Tribes. The bridges she has built and is building with these and many other groups help the Red Cross prepare for a better response in time of disasters.
To join the Red Cross as a nurse or other volunteer contact one of the local offices of the American Red Cross – in Johnson City, Kingsport, Morristown, or Greeneville.
Nurses have been a part of the American Red Cross since it was founded. Often Clara Barton, the first leader of the Red Cross in the US, is thought to have been a nurse. She was not a nurse, but did care for many during the Civil War. Red Cross nurses were, however, early volunteer and employee leaders in the organization. Nurses have maintained an important and continuing role in the work of the American Red Cross across the US. Two examples of that leadership follow:
Christine Triebe
Christine Baldwin Triebe (Chris) was born in England in 1904. In 1907 she came to America with her parents who settled in Johnson City, TN. She received her basic education in Johnson City Schools and the State Teacher’s College (which became ETSU). She became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1914 and graduated in 1926 from the Lankenau School of Nursing in Philadelphia.
Chris returned to Johnson City and assumed the position of night supervision at the Appalachian Hospital. In 1927, Christine came to Kingsport to become the Director of Nursing at the Marsh Clinic and Hospital Training School. She held that position until 1931 at which time the school voluntarily closed because it was too small to give adequate training to its students, according to the newer concepts for nursing education that were being developed in Tennessee. She married Edwin J. Triebe and made Kingsport her permanent home. She was an active volunteer nurse making a significant impact on health and professional nursing issues in Kingsport during the early to mid 1900s.
• At the Red Cross she served as Nursing Service Chairman and as a Board member, as trainer for Home Nursing Instructors across East Tennessee, as first instructor of Red Cross Nurses Aides for East Tennessee, and Red Cross First Aid and Home Nursing Instructor for over 20 years. One interesting aspect of her Red Cross work was conducting a survey to determine the needs for Visiting Nurse Services in Kingsport. The Visiting Nurse Service was an American Red Cross program that was a precursor of the United States Public Health Service.
• She was instrumental in recruitment of many nurses to volunteer with the local Red Cross.
• During the 1950’s when Civil Defense preparations were prominent across the country. Chris organized Home Nursing courses for all segments of the Kingsport community.
• She was active in the Parent Teachers Organization – as chairman of the Kingsport PTA Health Council she was responsible for a dental program and getting raincoats for the school safety patrol
• One of the lasting impacts of Chris’ community networking was beginning the Practical Nurse training Program in Kingsport. She brought together leaders to initiate the program, and then served as chairman of the Practical Nurse Committee of the Auxiliary at Holston Valley Hospital rendering guidance to the instructors and students.
• She rendered many hours of service in the well-baby clinics sponsored at the hospital
• She was active in the Girl Scouts- training 1000 Girl Scouts in Red Cross Home Nursing and Child Care
• She conducted investigations among needy families to determine eligibility for medical and surgical care sponsored by the Wednesday Club
• She instituted the first “Adult Education School” which taught the three R’s and the Red Cross Home Nursing to many women in the community
• She founded the Sullivan County Health Workers Group during WWII. Originally composed of members of Health Department, Office Nurses, Industrial Nurses, Lay leaders and physicians. This organization later became the Industrial Nurses Section of District V, Tennessee Nurses Association. She served in many local and state roles in the Tennessee State Nurses Association.
When the citizens of Kingsport needed assistance with solving community problems they instinctively turned to “Chris Triebe”. Her involvement with the Red Cross and other organizations enabled her to direct their thinking and attention to appropriate groups to help them. Her ability to network and share her knowledge of health care was definitely an asset to Kingsport and the Red Cross.
Carolyn Doerfert
More than 50 years after Christine Triebe shared her nursing skills in Kingsport many nurses have followed in her footsteps and served in numerous ways. One example is Carolyn Doerfert, who networks and volunteers in different but similar ways for the American Red Cross.
As much as our society changes – the Red Cross values and commitment to help remains the same.
Carolyn Doerfert uses her nursing and mental health knowledge often for the Red Cross. She may be preparing materials for an upcoming class or presentation or conferring about a current disaster case with other volunteers and staff. If she is not at the Chapter House she is online or on the phone taking care of the health services details for someone in need.
Carolyn loves sharing her professional skills with the Red Cross and has been doing so for many years. She graduated from the University of Rochester with a degree in psychology. She married her husband Gunther and came to the Kingsport area when her husband was transferred here from Eastman Kodak in Rochester. Kingsport was not unknown as her father had often visited here as a patent attorney. Soon after settling in Kingsport, she attended ETSU where she received an Associate Degree in Nursing. She then began a career in psychiatric nursing at Indian Path Pavilion.
One day at a business dinner, Carolyn met a gentleman from Nashville whose experiences as a Red Cross Disaster volunteer intrigued her. A call to the local Red Cross office and discussion with Jane Harris and Glenda Bobalik led her to what would become very much a “win-win” association for both Carolyn and the American Red Cross. She took basic disaster training, health services and mental health services classes and accepted her first assignment in 1998 – Hurricane George in Puerto Rico. She was hooked!
Carolyn has no idea how many disasters she has served on - too many to count she says – locally in northeast TN, across TN, or in states from west to east and north to south. Wildfires, floods, hurricanes, airline crashes and tornadoes are among the many disaster assignments she has accepted. While most often Carolyn works in Mental Health or Health Services, she has also accepted assignments in Casework and Staff Health. Carolyn loves feeling she has helped people in a time of great need, enjoys working with volunteers who share the same values, appreciates the high standards of our organization and loves continuing to learn. Carolyn is always learning from those she works with; as well as formally by completing certifications in Mental Health Nursing from American Nurses Association and National Disaster Nursing from St. Louis University.
Not only does Carolyn enjoy learning, she loves sharing her knowledge and love of Red Cross disaster with others. She has trained not only many of our current volunteer nurses in northeast TN, but others across TN and in many other states. She stays in touch with many of the individuals she trains and is a marvelous mentor and support for nurses during their first disaster assignments.
Carolyn is a good recruiter and trainer of volunteers, and helps network with other organizations in addition to the Red Cross. A few of the groups she has worked with recently include the TN Department of Health, the Prison System, and Indian Tribes. The bridges she has built and is building with these and many other groups help the Red Cross prepare for a better response in time of disasters.
To join the Red Cross as a nurse or other volunteer contact one of the local offices of the American Red Cross – in Johnson City, Kingsport, Morristown, or Greeneville.
Winter Safety Tips for Your Pets
Winter weather is hard on all of us with dangerously low temperatures, snow and ice. The frosty weather can also be
difficult for our pets and the American Red Cross has steps people can
follow to help ensure their pet’s safety when chilly weather hits their
area.
If possible, bring your
pets inside during cold winter weather. Move other animals or livestock
to sheltered areas and make sure they have access to non-frozen drinking
water. If the animals are outside, make sure their access to food and
water is not blocked by snow drifts, ice or other obstacles.
You can also download the Red Cross Pet First Aid
app to put veterinary advice for everyday pet emergencies in the palm
of your hand. Get the app and be prepared to act when called upon. With
videos, interactive quizzes and simple step-by-step advice it’s never
been easier to know Pet First Aid.
The following tips on winter pet safety are provided by The Humane Society of the United States:
For more information on how to get ready for winter, click here for winter storm safety information.
Wednesday, January 6, 2016
Letter from Northeast Tennessee Executive Director, Glenda Bobalik - January 2016
The last few weeks of 2015 were certainly memorable. Severe weather across the country had Red Cross workers dedicating their holidays to serving our friends and neighbors impacted by storms. In Tennessee, the Red Cross has provided assistance to over seventy families, and the work continues today.
As we begin 2016, volunteers are also responding to home fires with higher frequency in the colder months. Starting a new year with such a loss must seem overwhelming to those affected. So many of those affected by disaster tell us that the support of the Red Cross volunteers helping them through the challenges of rebuilding gives them strength to face the difficult road ahead. It also reminds us of the need for our preparedness education programs with the opportunity to make our communities safer.
The New Year is a time of renewal and promise. It reminds me of a quote from Edith Lovejoy Pierce:
Together, we can fill the pages of our opportunity book for 2016 with acts of generosity, kindness and service. Thank you for all that you have done and will do for the American Red Cross.
Glenda
As we begin 2016, volunteers are also responding to home fires with higher frequency in the colder months. Starting a new year with such a loss must seem overwhelming to those affected. So many of those affected by disaster tell us that the support of the Red Cross volunteers helping them through the challenges of rebuilding gives them strength to face the difficult road ahead. It also reminds us of the need for our preparedness education programs with the opportunity to make our communities safer.
The New Year is a time of renewal and promise. It reminds me of a quote from Edith Lovejoy Pierce:
“We will open the book. Its pages are blank. We are going to put words onAs volunteers, donors, partners, and employees of the Red Cross, lets join together to seek opportunities in this New Year. Expanding our team to include more people, reaching members of the community with preparedness messages, installing more smoke alarms, connecting military families in time of emergency, and helping those affected by disaster are just a few of the opportunities we face. As we deliver services, listen to those we serve, extend a kind hand up to those less fortunate, and work together to serve our communities we will turn each of the opportunities into success stories.
them ourselves. The book is called Opportunity and its first chapter is New
Year's Day.”
Together, we can fill the pages of our opportunity book for 2016 with acts of generosity, kindness and service. Thank you for all that you have done and will do for the American Red Cross.
Glenda
Letter from Tennessee River Executive Director, Faye Anderson - January 2016
Not All Heroes Wear Capes
The Tennessee River Chapter saw firsthand the hope that the Red Cross gives out to those in need this holiday season. The storms that hit on December 23rd resulted in a call to action that would take us away from our own families the week of Christmas to help those who had lost everything. We loaded up our ERV and vehicles with volunteers who were sent out to become heroes to many families.I personally had the opportunity to visit several communities that had been affected by the tornado. Standing there, I couldn’t imagine what fear the residents felt- the sounds and the sight of their homes after the wind had calmed and they were able to go outside. Can you imagine working your whole life to provide your family a safe place to live, only to have it disappear in a matter of minutes?
Many of the residents took shelter in a place built to withstand the strong winds. Others were not so lucky. One of the residents, 80 years of age, got into her bathtub to ride out the storm. She was found out in the nearby field still in her tub, still alive.
What a blessing and an honor it is to put on our distinctive Red Cross vest and see the relief in the face of an individual or family that has lost everything. I felt an immense amount of pride standing next to our volunteers, watching that compassion at work. The kind of heart that drives our volunteers into action is so rare and so precious. The hugs that they gave out gave these families a feeling of having someone to lean on; it gave them a starting point back to recovery. It is true that not all heroes wear capes, they come in all shapes and sizes. One thing is for sure: the Tennessee River is overflowing with heroes that those families will not soon forget.
To all of our volunteers, thank you for your willingness to give to others through your unbridled spirit of unselfishness. You are and always will be my hero!
Letter from Mid-West Tennessee Executive Director, Debra Roberson - January 2016
As we begin this New Year, I want to share with you something that was said many years ago by the speaker at a meeting I attended. “There is a bond between us that makes us brothers. No one walks a road alone. Whatever you put into the lives of others will surely come back into your own.” I think of this often when I am trying to help others and to do something for someone in need. At the Red Cross, our volunteers are always ready to keep those affected by disaster from walking the road alone. The Mid-West Tennessee Chapter volunteers proved this during the holidays when many of them left their families and deployed to help others in response to the storms that hit on December 23rd. We are very proud of our volunteers and want to thank you again for your dedication to the Red Cross mission.
The Mid-West TN Chapter will be relocating into our new facility at 19 Stonecreek Circle here in Jackson during the month of February. The renovation of the facility is progressing a little ahead of the proposed schedule, so I will send an alert out about our moving date as we create our relocation timeline. If you are available to assist in this move please notify me.
If you haven’t made a New Year Resolution, I hope you will include increasing your volunteer hours at the Mid-West TN Chapter in your plans. I also want to encourage everyone to attend the monthly volunteer meetings and invite others. Together we can build a strong team in 2016.
Debra Roberson
Executive Director
The Mid-West TN Chapter will be relocating into our new facility at 19 Stonecreek Circle here in Jackson during the month of February. The renovation of the facility is progressing a little ahead of the proposed schedule, so I will send an alert out about our moving date as we create our relocation timeline. If you are available to assist in this move please notify me.
If you haven’t made a New Year Resolution, I hope you will include increasing your volunteer hours at the Mid-West TN Chapter in your plans. I also want to encourage everyone to attend the monthly volunteer meetings and invite others. Together we can build a strong team in 2016.
Debra Roberson
Executive Director
Letter from East Tennessee Executive Director Michelle Hankes, January 2016
Happy New Year, East Tennessee!
Don’t you hate New Year’s resolutions? How many of you have declared you’ll go on a diet or start going to the gym and do pretty well...for the first two weeks!
I don’t want to make you any promises that are unrealistic. We all know that life can get crazy, especially at the Red Cross, when ice storms, floods, and fires happen when you least expect it.
That doesn’t mean that I (and all of us) can’t try to do things a little better, a little faster, and a little bigger each and every day. One of those things I want to offer each of you are professional development workshops that not only can help you with your work with the Red Cross, but also with your personal and professional lives. Some of the topics suggested—and that I’m following up on—include workshops on active shooter response, time management and relationship building. I’ve also received requests for presentations from some of our community partners, like the FBI, Baptist Association, and AARP.
If you have suggestions, please contact me so I can see what I can schedule. These could be 30-minute presentations, tours at sites, half-day, or full-day workshops. Send your suggestions to michelle.hankes@redcross.org.
Don’t you hate New Year’s resolutions? How many of you have declared you’ll go on a diet or start going to the gym and do pretty well...for the first two weeks!
I don’t want to make you any promises that are unrealistic. We all know that life can get crazy, especially at the Red Cross, when ice storms, floods, and fires happen when you least expect it.
That doesn’t mean that I (and all of us) can’t try to do things a little better, a little faster, and a little bigger each and every day. One of those things I want to offer each of you are professional development workshops that not only can help you with your work with the Red Cross, but also with your personal and professional lives. Some of the topics suggested—and that I’m following up on—include workshops on active shooter response, time management and relationship building. I’ve also received requests for presentations from some of our community partners, like the FBI, Baptist Association, and AARP.
If you have suggestions, please contact me so I can see what I can schedule. These could be 30-minute presentations, tours at sites, half-day, or full-day workshops. Send your suggestions to michelle.hankes@redcross.org.
Letter from Heart of Tennessee Executive Director, Mike Cowles - January 2016
Greetings
Each year, without fail, I set 3-5 New Year’s resolutions and usually only accomplish 1 or 2 goals. Losing weight is always my top priority along with having a healthy diet and controlling my stress. Those 3 goals I usually fail miserably at within the first few weeks of the year.
One goal I have each year that I do believe I’ve improved on is better communication. This is a tricky act to accomplish, particularly when deciding what to say and when to say it in different situations. Communication is something we use every day of our lives. Our children communicate every day at school and at home, we adults communicate 24/7 with e-mail, text, Facebook and believe it or not, some of us still use the telephone to communicate.
No matter what goals or resolutions you have set this year, try to do the following to better your community.
1. Enroll in an American Red Cross Health and Safety Training course: Learn how to perform CPR, use an AED machine, do first aid, how to swim, be trained to baby sit or how to save a life.
2. Make a Disaster Kit: What do you need for you and your family to survive when disaster strikes?
3. Support our Armed Forces: Did you know we work with Active Military personnel and their families. The Red Cross also supports various efforts at the VA hospital and State Veteran’s Home.
4. Get involved: You may not realize this but everyone has a skill that we can use here at the American Red Cross. You can be a front desk greeter, do data entry, train others, go out on disaster calls or be a smiling face that makes a difference.
Whatever New Year resolution you choose, I encourage you to include one of the above functions here at the American Red Cross. Please feel welcome to stop by our office to find out the many possibilities there are for you to serve. Make a difference in your community, you will never regret it!
Mike
Each year, without fail, I set 3-5 New Year’s resolutions and usually only accomplish 1 or 2 goals. Losing weight is always my top priority along with having a healthy diet and controlling my stress. Those 3 goals I usually fail miserably at within the first few weeks of the year.
One goal I have each year that I do believe I’ve improved on is better communication. This is a tricky act to accomplish, particularly when deciding what to say and when to say it in different situations. Communication is something we use every day of our lives. Our children communicate every day at school and at home, we adults communicate 24/7 with e-mail, text, Facebook and believe it or not, some of us still use the telephone to communicate.
No matter what goals or resolutions you have set this year, try to do the following to better your community.
1. Enroll in an American Red Cross Health and Safety Training course: Learn how to perform CPR, use an AED machine, do first aid, how to swim, be trained to baby sit or how to save a life.
2. Make a Disaster Kit: What do you need for you and your family to survive when disaster strikes?
3. Support our Armed Forces: Did you know we work with Active Military personnel and their families. The Red Cross also supports various efforts at the VA hospital and State Veteran’s Home.
4. Get involved: You may not realize this but everyone has a skill that we can use here at the American Red Cross. You can be a front desk greeter, do data entry, train others, go out on disaster calls or be a smiling face that makes a difference.
Whatever New Year resolution you choose, I encourage you to include one of the above functions here at the American Red Cross. Please feel welcome to stop by our office to find out the many possibilities there are for you to serve. Make a difference in your community, you will never regret it!
Mike
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