Volunteer’s ‘detective’ work helps reconnect missing people with family and friends
By Mauri Shuler
Simon Timony told his two bosses (he works two jobs – as a caretaker and a bartender) that he was leaving his home in San Francisco to help fire victims in the North Bay. Then he got a ride to his assignment in Napa County. “It was so horrific, I had to get here.” Read more
Every disaster response needs a Tamara Jones.
Blanca Harnwell came to the American Red Cross shelter at the Finley Community Center in Santa Rosa on October 12 because she needed a change of clothes. Almost all of her belongings had been lost in the wildfire that leveled her Santa Rosa home a few days earlier. Blanca, a 46-year resident of Sonoma County, was able to find a pair of jeans and some capris that fit. In the disarrayed piles of clothing that had been donated by a generous community, she found something more: a volunteer job that allowed her to take her mind off her personal woes while she helped others.
Three generations of Christil Bell’s family, five people in all, and their pit bull mix Bully had been living in their recreational vehicle in the parking lot of the Finley Community Center in Santa Rosa for three days when American Red Cross volunteer Laura Hovden came knocking on their door. 