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[ENS] Diocesan Digest: Special hurricane relief edition


From "Matthew Davies" <mdavies@episcopalchurch.org>
Date Thu, 15 Sep 2005 16:05:56 -0400

Diocesan Digest
Thursday, September 15, 2005

Special hurricane relief edition

* ALABAMA: Alabama deacons help organize relief efforts
* ARKANSAS: Small-town parish helps with evacuees
* LOS ANGELES: Leaders to meet on coordinating response
* EAST TENNESSEE: ERD helps diocese welcome displaced people
* LOUISIANA: Clergy and spouses get chaplaincy help
* MISSISSIPPI: Bishop cancels Special Diocesan Council meeting
* NEW YORK: Benefit concert planned
* TEXAS: Diocese and parishes come together to help evacuees
* WESTERN KANSAS: Vulnerable children and adults relocated
* WESTERN LOUISIANA: Diocesan Convention Shortened

ALABAMA: Alabama deacons help organize relief efforts

[SOURCE: Diocese of Alabama] The Rev. Deacon Forrest DeBuys at All
Saints,
Birmingham, is coordinating trucking of requested items on the wish list
for
the Diocese of Mississippi.
Deacons Stan Easton and Bruce Drube are working with Episcopal
parishes in the Anniston area in support of the transitional housing
shelter
being established at the old Fort McClellan.

ARKANSAS: Small-town parish helps with evacuees

[SOURCE: Episcopal Relief and Development website] Deacon Gene Crawford
of
St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Crossett writes that as many as 75
evacuees
have moved into the town of 6,000.
Crossett is 360 miles from the Gulf Coast, just across the Louisiana
border and a five or six hour drive from New Orleans or Biloxi under
normal
circumstances.
Churches have responded and the whole town is working together. More
than $4,500 in donations have been distributed, mostly in the form of
cash
and gift certificates from local stores. Groups have been serving meals
to
evacuees and local pharmacists are filing prescriptions for free.
"We are only putting a band-aid on a broken leg," Crawford writes.
"We hope that at least we are providing some solace for the time being."

LOS ANGELES: Leaders to meet on coordinating response

[SOURCE: Diocese of Los Angeles] Clergy and lay leaders of congregations
in
the Diocese of Los Angeles will get a briefing with officials of the
city
and county of Los Angeles and Lutheran clergy and leaders on Monday,
September 19, at the Cathedral Center of St. Paul. At the meeting, which
will be hosted by Bishop J. Jon Bruno and Bishop Dean Nelson of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church of America (ECLA) synod, plans and resources
for
relief for evacuees from the hurricane Katrina area will be discussed,
including housing, food, school and employment issues.
Additionally, more than 100 beds have been made available throughout
the diocese for those who are being evacuated to California, said Canon
Lydia Lopez. The bishops are also offering a place for rest and respite
for
clergy who have been working in the devastated areas at the Cathedral
Retreat Center in Los Angeles. They are also asking for donations of
frequent flier miles to help those in need of air transportation.
Meanwhile, disaster relief efforts continue throughout the diocese,
with Episcopalians opening their hearts and their homes to evacuees from
Louisiana and elsewhere. They include:

All Saints, Beverly Hills, has raised more than $50,000, and the parish
continues to raise money to be channeled through Episcopal Relief and
Development to help continuing relief efforts. Plans are also in the
works
for such program as adopting churches or adopting families to building
houses, said the Rev. Jimmy Bartz, associate at All Saints. The church
also
hosted a prayer service on September 7 that drew 200 and has donated
money
directly to the Episcopal Diocese of Texas Hurricane Relief Fund to help
out
with the evacuees in Houston.

Campbell Hall School, North Hollywood, is hosting three students
displaced
by the hurricane. A Campbell Hall family is hosting the family of two of
the
displaced students who evacuated. All Saints, Beverly Hills, is working
in
partnership with the school in this effort. In addition, the school is
working with several shelters in rural Louisiana whom, according to
headmaster Julian Bull, the American Red Cross is not assisting. Through
their efforts, tractor-
trailers and temporary housing are being made available as efforts
continue
over the long-term.

All Saints, Pasadena, plans an emergency relief garage sale for
Saturday.
Bishop Bruno has donated old furniture to the sale. The parish has
already
raised more than $140,000 for hurricane relief and continues to raise
money,
said Mark Ziolkowski, administrative assistant in peace and justice. The
congregation is also offering housing and is suggesting those interested
in
volunteering in Gulf Coast states attend a Red Cross training this
Friday
and Saturday at Azusa Pacific University. The Rev. Ed Bacon, rector,
traveled to Baton Rouge to assess how the parish could assist those
affected.

EAST TENNESSEE: ERD helps diocese welcome displaced people

[SOURCE: Episcopal Relief and Development website] Episcopal Relief and
Development has partnered with the Diocese of East Tennessee to help
relocate displaced people from Louisiana and Mississippi. The assistance
will provide food for families in Roane County, a rural area near
Knoxville.
At least 250 families, or an estimated 1,000 people, are expected. The
effort will be coordinated by St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in Harriman.

"Along with countless others, I am grateful for the responsiveness of
Episcopal Relief and Development and for the compassionate ministry of
relief that your organization offers to those in need," said Bishop
Charles
G. von Rosenberg of East Tennessee.

LOUISIANA: Clergy and spouses get chaplaincy help

[SOURCE: Diocese of Louisiana] A Day of Reflection and Preparation for
all
clergy and spouses is planned for Friday, September 16, at St.
Margaret's,
Baton Rouge. The day will be led by Diocesan Bishop Charles Jenkins and
George Packard, Bishop Suffragan for Chaplaincies, and a team organized
by
Bishop Packard. The aim of the program is to give clergy and their
spouses a
place to come with their own concerns and feelings about the impact
Katrina
has had on their lives and the lives of their parishioners. Clergy are
required to attend the program.

Meanwhile, St. Alban's Chapel on the campus of Louisiana State
University in
Baton Rouge is collecting school supplies to give to hurricane-hit
students
who are now enrolling at the school. There are some 10,000 new students
from
the surrounding university and colleges who are trying to make a home in
Baton Rouge. Students may stop by the chapel during regular offices
hours to
pick up what they need.

MISSISSIPPI: Bishop cancels Special Diocesan Council meeting

[SOURCE: Diocese of Mississippi] Bishop Duncan M. Gray, III, of
Mississippi
told clergy and delegates to the 179th Annual Council that "the
catastrophic
impact of Hurricane Katrina and the unprecedented challenges presented
to us
and our church family on the Gulf Coast" require him to rescind his call
for
a Special Diocesan Council, originally scheduled for October 1 in
Vicksburg.

The meeting was to address the issues raised by the Windsor Report.

"My commitment to address the presenting issues in our common life
remains,"
Gray wrote, adding that he is committed to having the "necessary
conversations" in the regular gathering of the Diocesan Council in
February
2006 in Southaven.

NEW YORK: Benefit concert planned

The Jubilee Youth Chorale at Episcopal Church of Our Savior in Chinatown
will present the program they recently performed in China during a
benefit
concert Sunday, September 25, at 4pm. All of the money raised from this
concert will go toward the Louisiana and Mississippi Hurricane Relief
fund
established by Bishop Mark Sisk of New York. The choristers have just
returned from a concert-tour to China, having sung in Beijing, Shanghai,
Hangzhou and Suzhou for audiences in the thousands. Tickets are $20 per
person. Donations are greatly appreciated and will be collected on an
ongoing basis. For more information, please call 212.233.2899. The
church is
located at 48 Henry Street.

TEXAS: Diocese and parishes come together to help evacuees

[SOURCE: Diocese of Texas] Richard Parkins of Episcopal Migration
Ministries
was in the diocese this week to educate about resettlement issues. While
many congregations are doing this locally in the short term, there will
no
doubt be a long-term need. Parkins met with people at All Saints in
Austin,
Christ Church in Tyler, and Trinity in Houston. Parishes were asked to
send
at least one congregational representative to one of the meetings.
A service in response to the call by President George W. Bush for a
National Day of Prayer and Remembrance for the Victims of Hurricane
Katrina
will be held at Christ Church Cathedral, Houston, at noon on Friday. The
service will include prayers, hymns, scripture reading, and a homily by
Bishop Don A. Wimberly of Texas. Following the prayer service, there
will be
a celebration of Holy Communion, for those who wish to participate.
Parishes all across the diocese have taken on the mission of
hurricane relief. Here is a sampling of their ministries.
Episcopal Church of the Resurrection, Austin, opened its
Resurrection Thrift Shop to a family evacuated from New Orleans who
arrived
in Austin to stay with family. Several members of ECR have also worked
with
a young man, now staying in Austin with his father, and who evacuated
New
Orleans after four days at the Superdome, to help him find employment,
and
to help meet his material and spiritual needs. ECR is working with
Episcopal
Migration Ministries (EMM) to provide clothing for refugees and evacuees
through the Resurrection Thrift Shop, and has agreed to house an office
of
EMM on the ECR campus.

St. Mark's, Bay City, is helping to feed 150 evacuees at First Baptist
Church in Bay City.

St. Mark's, Beaumont, has joined with Spindletop Unitarian Church of
Beaumont to provide 500 brown bag breakfasts every Tuesday morning for
the
residents of a shelter at Ford Park. The ECW resale shop, Treasure
House, is
providing three changes of clothing to anyone with Louisiana,
Mississippi,
or Alabama identification. The church is collecting hygiene kits, books
and
school supplies. ECW is funding prescriptions for evacuees.

St. Stephen's, Beaumont, is adopting families whose children are
entering
Beaumont school by providing backpacks, school supplies and clothing;
supplying many volunteers at the largest shelter, which houses 1500
people.

St. Peter's, Brenham, adopted a family from New Orleans who are friends
of
organist Linda Patterson.

Epiphany, Burnet, has a counseling center at the church with a licensed
counselor a couple of days a week and has expanded the community food
bank.
Seminarian Bonnie Edwards has been serving as a chaplain at the Austin
convention center evacuee site.

St. James, Conroe, is supporting the local Red Cross shelter at First
United
Methodist Church helping with bedding, toiletries and $1,150 in gift
cards.
Parishioners provide meals, sort clothes and baby-sit. The soup kitchen
team
helps feed the evacuees flocking to the local Salvation Army facility.
Two
parishioners are board members of the Montgomery County Emergency
Assistance/Housing Authority, and are collecting furniture and household
furnishings for families moving into permanent housing in the area.

Holy Trinity, Dickinson, was a drop off point for clothing donated to
the
local shelters. Church members sorted the clothes by size and gender and
then took it to the shelter for distribution. They also delivered meals
provided by the school district to evacuees still in area hotels and
have
staffed local food pantries. A special collection was sent to Christ
Church
in Prairieville, Louisiana. Holy Trinity hosted their youth mission trip
in
June and as a result, developed a close relationship with this church.
Christ Church has adopted a number of families from Chalmette,
Louisiana.

Christ the King, Houston, delivered food and non-food items to the
Second
Baptist Church, Houston. A second offering each Sunday in September will
be
contributed to feeding evacuees.

Epiphany, Houston, sent volunteers to the Astrodome and collected
supplies
for the evacuees.

Palmer Memorial, Houston, has served more than 2,056 meals to people at
the
church and in motels near the Astrodome.

Trinity, Houston, is housing for 30 AmeriCorp volunteers.

St. Dunstan's, Houston, provided sack lunches for people staying at a
nearby
Holiday Inn, as well as providing them with a hot meal at the church.

St. George's and St. Patrick's, Houston, is hosting a Rainbow Concert on
Saturday, September 17 at the church to benefit Hurricane Katrina
victims.

St. Luke the Evangelist, Houston, distributed clothing to Salvation
Army,
and food to the Houston Food Bank. The parish is providing support for
one
evacuee family living in the guest apartment of the rectory.

St. Peter's, Lago Vista, is supporting an elementary school in Galena
Park,
which has been "inundated" with refugee children by sending school
supplies
and toiletry items.

St. Michael's, La Marque, "adopted" a shelter in Hitchcock where there
will
be up to 120 individuals housed. The church delivered a shipment of
underwear, socks, toiletries, vitamins, towels, toys for the children
and
food and will provide a weekly meal and an ongoing supply of snacks.

St. Mary's, Lampasas, is helping three family members of a parishioner
who
were displaced with a rented home in Lampasas. They will furnish
household
goods as needed. A parishioner who owns Perks Coffee Bar in Lampasas is
receiving donations from patrons for Episcopal Relief and Development.

Christ Church, Nacogdoches, and its school purchased 90 new backpacks
distributed to children of evacuees who started school locally. The
parish
is a collection center for furniture, house wares, cooking utensils,
TVs,
and other things to give to families setting up in area apartments. They
are
using a newly purchased church van to pick up evacuees at area Red Cross
shelters and take them to local laundromats to do their wash and
transporting shelter residents to the high school gym for showering.

St. Thomas School, Naussa Bay, students collected hundreds of water
bottles
for the Red Cross and collected white polo shirts and khaki pants and
shorts
for many of the 400 students who were placed at Fondren Middle School.
St.
Thomas School welcomed four new families to the school from Louisiana
and is
currently collecting gift cards at local retailers and grocers to give
to
those families and others who lost everything in the hurricane.

St. Paul's, Orange, held a baby shower for an expectant mother who lost
all
her baby items in the storm. The vestry donated money to the local Red
Cross
and the Salvation Army, provided volunteers for the local evacuation
centers
and served meals. The parish organized a calling committee that contacts
each church member with a list of needs.

Holy Trinity, Pt. Neches, collected supplies for three Orange County
shelters and cooking/serving meals as requested by the shelters.

St. Paul's, Waco, is helping to clean and paint FEMA appropriated
apartments
for evacuees. They have five apartments for the five families they are
helping. The congregation is collecting necessary items to set up a
household as well.

Trinity, The Woodlands, is assisting many displaced persons in the
Spring/Woodlands area with gas cards and clothing/food cards. The parish
has
adopted the residents of a local motel with teams of two parishioners
assigned to each displaced family. Pastoral care is offered. Trinity is
also
working closely with the parish families who have loved ones or other
survivors living with them. Youth are hosting pizza suppers and they
plan an
intergenerational mission trip to Hammond, Louisiana, in the future.
Clergy
and lay representatives are working with ecumenical groups in the area
to
prevent duplication of effort. Community of Hope chaplains are serving
at
the George R. Brown shelter and locally. Nurses and doctors from the
parish
are volunteering at Conroe shelters. The ECW continues to assemble
hygiene
kits as well as household cleaning kits for those moving into
apartments.
The church has 18 volunteers who have trained for Operation Compassion.

Fourth grade students at Holy Spirit Episcopal School, Houston,
collected
"Pennies for Hope for the Gulf Coast" during carpool and at lunch on
September 7 for the Episcopal Church's Relief Fund and the Red Cross.

WESTERN KANSAS: Vulnerable children and adults relocated

[SOURCE: Episcopal Relief and Development website] Hurricane Katrina
caused
extensive damage to the roof and foundation of the St. Francis Academy
facilities in Pascagoula and Picayune. St. Francis Academy Inc. is an
Episcopal child welfare ministry serving 700 clients in seven states,
including Kansas. At-risk youth and developmentally disabled adults were
evacuated from facilities in Mississippi to St. Francis' operation in
Salina, Kansas, and to apartments loaned to the academy by the people of
Halstead, Kansas. ERD's support is helping transfer the evacuees to
facilities in Kansas and provide the displaced youth and adults with
food,
shelter, school supplies, and other specialized services.
"It will be a long time before power and safe drinking water are
restored," said the Very Rev. Edward Fellhauer, dean and president of
St.
Francis, in a statement on the academy's Web site. "The Coast is not a
place
for them to stay at this time. We are grateful to have the option and
ability to bring them to Kansas."

WESTERN LOUISIANA: Diocesan Convention Shortened

[SOURCE: Diocese of Western Louisiana] Bishop Bruce MacPherson of
Western
Louisiana told the diocese this week that he has decided to shorten the
annual convention to one day.
"Over these past days I have, as I know many of you have, given much
thought and prayer to the days ahead," the bishop wrote in his September
12
letter. "One of the things that has been heavy on my heart is that we
seek
to be good stewards in the midst of that which has taken place."
The diocese was scheduled to meet on Friday and Saturday, October 28
and 29, at St. James Parish, Alexandria. Friday night's dinner was to
cost
$30.00 per person and would have required many people to stay overnight
in a
hotel. MacPherson said he was concerned about people incurring that
expense
and whether hotel rooms would even be available then. Many hurricane
evacuees are living in the diocese.
The Rt. Rev. John B. Lipscomb, former priest of the diocese and
present Bishop of Southwest Florida, will preach at the opening
Eucharist.

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