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Press Release: FEMA
August 31, 2005
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Voluntary organizations are seeking cash donations to assist victims of Hurricane Katrina in
Gulf Coast states, according to Michael D. Brown, Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Emergency Preparedness
and Response. But, volunteers should not report directly to the affected areas unless directed by a voluntary agency.
“Cash donations are especially helpful to victims,” Brown said. “They allow volunteer agencies to issue cash vouchers
to victims so they can meet their needs. Cash donations also allow agencies to avoid the labor-intensive need to
store, sort, pack and distribute donated goods. Donated money prevents, too, the prohibitive cost of air or sea
transportation that donated goods require.”
Volunteer agencies provide a wide variety of services after disasters, such as clean up, childcare, housing repair,
crisis counseling, sheltering and food.
“We’re grateful for the outpouring of support already,” Brown said. “But it’s important that volunteer response
is coordinated by the professionals who can direct volunteers with the appropriate skills to the hardest-hit areas
where they are needed most. Self-dispatched volunteers and especially sightseers can put themselves and others
in harm’s way and hamper rescue efforts.”
Here is a list of phone numbers set up solely for cash donations and/or volunteers.
Donate cash to:
Donate Cash to and Volunteer with:
For further information: visit the website for the National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (NVOAD)
at: http://www.nvoad.org/.
FEMA prepares the nation for all hazards and manages federal response and recovery efforts following any national
incident. FEMA also initiates mitigation activities, trains first responders, works with state and local emergency
managers, and manages the National Flood Insurance Program and the U.S. Fire Administration. FEMA became part of
the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on March 1, 2003.
Source: FEMA