One hundred days which changed the lives of so many...
Sunday September 14, 2008, was supposed to be, for me, an intentionally
uneventful day. I had even made a point of going to mass the previous evening,
so that I'd have no obligations on Sunday. For a variety of reasons, I needed a
day of rest and relaxation. So there I sat Sunday morning, in my living room
recliner, having walked the dog and fed the cat, ready for a day of nothing.
Some cable news program was on the television as background noise, reporting the
aftermath of Hurricane Ike and my laptop was in...well...my lap, as I read Dr.
Masters blog and the comments on the same subject. Just your average, garden
variety lazy Sunday morning.
Then a fellow by the name of Patrick Pearson
(y'all know him better as Patrap) posted a comment which would profoundly and
positively transform my life...and the lives of hundreds and hundreds of
people.
It's a story about the fundamental goodness of the human spirit
and the power of community...and the Internet as a tool to facilitate great
works.
And it goes something like this.
Pat posted that he was putting together
a truck load of relief supplies to take to Texas, as repayment for the
generosity shown by Texans toward his beloved New Orleans in the wake of
Hurricane Katrina. I, and several others, e-mailed him to ask where we might
send donations to help defray expenses.
Then, it occurred to me that I
was on the board of a small non-profit, tax exempt 501c3 organization called
Portlight Strategies, Inc., which might be able to help. This group was founded
in 1997 to facilitate a variety of projects involving people with disabilities,
including post-disaster relief projects. I suggested to Pat that we run
donations through this group, as it would enable people to deduct their
contributions. He agreed...and set up a PayPal account to accept donations.
Portlight Strategies, Inc., would then reimburse his expenses. It was a win/win
situation for everyone involved. I expected we'd raise about $1500 from a
handful of folks, Pat would make a run to Texas...and that would be the end of
it.
There is simply no way I could have been any more wrong.
What
ensued throughout the rest of that day...and the following days and weeks...can
best be described as a nuclear explosion of human generosity. The blog filled
quickly with posts from virtually all of you wanting to help the Ike survivors.
My e-mail and WU mail boxes filled up with notes from people wanting to help.
Ideas were flying around like (I know this is lame, but it kinda fits)...debris
in a hurricane. And the PayPal button was on fire.
Volunteers, money, and
ideas began rolling in. Crashing in. It was astonishing...and a bit
frightening...and overwhelmingly gratifying. Within a day or two we had
collected over ten times what I expected in contributions.
At some point
on that Sunday, I called my friend John Wilbanks (Stormjunkie) here in
Charleston (it's in the Carolinas), and told him what was happening...and he
agreed to meet me at my office the next morning to help sort through things and
come up with a plan. As Dr. Masters has noted, hurricanes cause chaos. And in my
conference room that Monday morning I handed John a big old bag full of
chaos...and asked him to begin sorting it out.
(By the way...this is a
good time for me to address a very important point. Literally hundreds of you
are integral to this wonderful story. It has truly been a grassroots
phenomenon...and we all share equally in it. To mention everyone would likely
shut down the WU servers. But three people have been critical: Patrick Pearson,
John Wilbanks and Jeff Masters. Without the vision, focused effort and
support--in that order--of these three, we couldn't have accomplished a fraction
of what we've accomplished.)
So...John got busy. By the end of the first
week he had made contact with people in the affected areas outside of Houston
and we began to get a sense of what their needs were. Meanwhile, members of the
Weather Underground community were continuing to communicate their thoughts and
ideas with us, and plans were coming into focus. Dr. Masters got wind of all
this and began mentioning it in his blog entries. Thanks largely to input from a
variety of WU faithful, we realized that the most pressing needs were in the
rural and small town areas away from Houston; additionally, people with
disabilities throughout the area needed help. Thus we began to plan our efforts
to assist the un-served, under served and forgotten people.
Supplies were
secured to fill specific requests. Trucks were arranged. People were recruited.
Funds were budgeted. And by the next week we were rolling. Into Houston...into
Anahuac...into Winnie...into Bridge City...onto the Bolivar Peninsula.
The stories of the devastation we heard from our crews were unimaginable...and
heart wrenching. The stories of the gratitude expressed to our crews by the Ike
victims they met were heart felt...and heart warming.
"We thought the
world had forgotten us," said one tearful Bridge City official.
"I don't
have the vocabulary to adequately thank you all", said a Houston
official.
A poor mother at a shelter in Winnie broke into sobs when
handed a box of diapers. A box of diapers.
Other truck loads of supplies
were delivered to the area in a second wave of relief about a month later.
Thanks to some brilliant WU minds, much of our effort can now be seen and heard
in real time via webcam. Many of you "rode in the back seat" and saw
first hand the destruction of the Bolivar Peninsula on one of these
trips.
Additionally, a significant amount of specifically requested
supplies--from clothing to medical equipment--have been freighted into the area
to contacts we made.
Also, we've facilitated ramp building for disability
service organizations, arranged a scholarship for a college student with a
disability, repatriated WU blogger BillyBadBird to his home on the Bolivar
Peninsula, hosted a pizza party on the Bolivar Peninsula for survivors and
relief workers. And we put on a big Christmas party with gifts for children in
Bridge City on December 20th which was attended by WU members from around the
country...and which was webcast by Portlight.
And our work isn't done. Sometime
early next year we are going to begin making small financial grants to groups in
the Ike affected area.
At this point, we've raised about $40,000...and
delivered over $500,000 in goods and services.
So, we now turn our
attention to the future. Ike will hardly be the last hurricane to create chaos
on our shores. But out of the chaos of Ike came some great
revelations.
There are certain populations which are simply not well
served by the large institutional and government relief infrastructure. It's a
niche which Portlight Strategies, Inc., has filled in relatively small ways in
past disasters. And which this community has filled in a big way since Ike. We
are deeply committed to filling this niche in the future.
We are working
now to establish several permanent staging areas along the East and Gulf coasts,
so that we can respond to the needs of un-served, under served and forgotten
people in an efficient manner. A series of grants we are scheduled to receive
will begin to fund this. We are also working through budgeting and planning for
the future. We are committed to having a reserve fund of $100,000 by June 1 of
next year.
I am working on a multi-city Walk A Thon which will raise awareness and funds.
Shortly after the Holidays, we will unroll details on all of this. We're gonna
need y'alls' help with all this. In the meantime, if you have any money laying
around that you don't know what to do with; the PayPal button still works
nicely. Or checks can be mailed to: Portlight Strategies, Inc. 2043 Maybank Hwy,
Charleston, SC 29412.
OK...I got the shameless plug for money out of the way...so I'll wrap this
up.
Each of you owns an equal share of all this. You...I mean YOU...made
this happen. Hundreds of people have come together in a spirit of community to
help people in desperate need. And next year, any one of us could find ourselves
in the exact same situation.
This can be one of two things:
1) A
one shot deal that did a lot of good for a lot of people.
or
2)
The beginning of an ongoing transformational process that makes us all the
better for it for the rest of our lives.
I'm casting my lot with the
second choice. And, based on what I've seen in the last 100 days, I'm pretty
sure you will, too. We should all be proud of ourselves..and grateful for the
opportunity to serve.
Paul Timmons, Jr.
for questions regarding this website send requests to webmaster@portlight.org 2043 Maybank Highway Charleston, SC 29412 (843) 817-2651