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Adventist Community Services Provides Ongoing Disaster Response in Northern California and Northwest Oregon

Historic fires from the summer destroy hundreds of thousands of acres; ACS continues its food distribution and hurricane response.

A Northern California Conference ACS center located within Napa County, California, was severely damaged by The Glass Fire that ravaged the area last month. Photo W. Derrick Lea/Adventist Community Services.

A Northern California Conference ACS center located within Napa County, California, was severely damaged by The Glass Fire that ravaged the area last month. Photo W. Derrick Lea/Adventist Community Services.

UPDATED Oct. 15, 2020, 12:50 p.m. EDT - Wildfires that began small and relatively contained in northwest Oregon in late August became a catastrophic disaster beginning Labor Day weekend, creating one of the most destructive events to take place in the state. Hundreds of thousands of acres of land have been destroyed, forcing thousands of residents to evacuate. While 60 percent of the fire has been contained, many are still displaced from — or have completely lost — their homes.

The damage is still widely and deeply felt. Needs are still urgent and plenty, which led Adventist Community Services (ACS) of the North American Division to help in mobilizing branches from across the country to assist in disaster response.

Upon arrival in late September, teams from South Central and Southeastern Conferences who were assigned to manage a warehouse distribution site in Salem, Oregon, and a team from the Rocky Mountain Conference to do the same in Grants Pass, were met with obstacles in obtaining access to the properties. As they waited, ACS was asked to assist in another site that would be key in reaching a largely-affected population.

“Not wanting to waste valuable time, we visited a couple of distribution sites in Lincoln City. Since Oregon has never experienced a disaster event of this magnitude, they are unfamiliar with how to properly manage a distribution site,” said W. Derrick Lea, director of NAD ACS Disaster Response. “Given our unexpected availability, the state asked if they could accompany the team to Lincoln City to educate the locals on how to set up a site properly.”

After a week of being in Oregon, the conference teams were able to access their respective warehouse to begin facilitating distribution operations, which will be ongoing for the next few months.

“I am grateful for the flexibility of the teams and thankful for the opportunity to support a group that has no other objective than to help those in a time of need,” said Lea. “We will continue to seek God’s direction and wisdom in this effort.”

Currently, the Rocky Mountain, South Central, and Oregon conferences are accepting donations from around the country that will be sent out to distribution centers managed by ACS and other disaster response agencies.

Assessing Damage in Napa County

After setting up operations in Oregon, Lea traveled to Napa County in California’s North Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area to assess damage caused by the Glass Fire. Last month, the 10th most destructive fire in the state’s history burned more that 67,000 acres in Napa and Sonoma, the vast majority of land damage, however, was in Napa County.

Lea visited the area where the Foothill Seventh-day Adventist School and Haven Seventh-day Adventist Church-operated ACS center are located. He was accompanied by James Lim, director of ACS for the Northern California Conference, and Josie Ascencio, Haven church pastor.

"We spoke with a few insurance adjusters as we walked around ours and neighboring properties, they have already begun to determine what the cost of the damage will be for homes that are still intact. Unfortunately, some homes and building have been declared a total loss. In addition, some residents and tenets do not have insurance,” said Lea.

“Many of those affected are living in shelters, hotels, or with relatives who are out of town. Recovery will be a long, challenging process,” continued Lea.

As for the elementary school, the upper half and front of the property was destroyed, however, trees near the school shielded the back and lower half of the property from the flames.

“While I hoped for better at the school, I quickly lost those thoughts as I stood in front of what had been a school for our young people. Lim gave a history of this building and noted Ellen G. White, co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, encouraged the local church to open this school,” said Lea. “As I walked the rubble, I wondered if the school would again be able to offer instruction in the future.”

Lea and Lim are developing plans that will include the conference, Pacific Union Conference, and NAD to determine how ACS will serve Napa County.

The Work Goes On

The Oregon and California fires have not been the only disasters ACS has addressed this month and in September. Relief and assistance have also been needed in other regions of the U.S.

The Florida Conference ACS activated warehouse distribution operations in Pensacola, Florida, in the face of Hurricane Sally, which affected the state’s panhandle. In addition, ACS has been on alert as needs are assessed in Louisiana as a result of Hurricane Delta.

ACS is also continuing its wide-scale food distribution by sending four, 53-foot trailers full of food to centers in Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Maryland, Manhattan, New York, and Jacksonville, Florida, in partnership with DOT Foods delivery service.