Chico Foods Supports California Wildfire Relief

Thank you to Asheet Sharma of  Chico Foods for the company’s generous donation to the American Red Cross’ California Wildfire Relief fund.

The funds were recently donated at Jack in the Box restaurants in Redding.

This is not the first time Chico Foods has stepped up to support us. Thank you!

 

Red Cross Launches Online First Aid for Opoid Overdoses

The American Red Cross has launched First Aid for Opioid Overdoses – an online course to teach people how to respond to a known or suspected opioid overdose.

“An opioid overdose is a life-threatening emergency,” said Stephen Walsh, American Red Cross Gold Country Region Communications Director. “When you suspect an opioid overdose, it’s important to start providing care immediately.”

People can register and access the course at https://www.redcross.org/take-a-class/opioidoverdose. Because an opioid overdose can lead to cardiac arrest, people are also encouraged to take a Red Cross CPR/AED course.

Recently, the Red Cross had the opportunity to share its commitment and efforts to help address this public health crisis at a White House opioids event. Learn more about the event, and the involvement of the Red Cross here: https://www.whitehouse.gov/articles/year-historic-action-combat-opioid-crisis/

Red Cross has also prepared guidance on opioid use and overdose response for those working in the organization’s shelters during disasters. Recently, these efforts empowered a Red Cross volunteer to help save the life of a person in a shelter during Hurricane Florence.

Walmart, Mexican Red Cross among 2018 Red Cross Leadership Award recipients

The American Red Cross National Leadership Awards ceremony will be held this evening at American Red Cross national headquarters in Washington, D.C.

Awards being given at tonight’s Leadership Awards Dinner are the Harriman Award for Distinguished Volunteer Service, the Susan Hassmiller Nursing Award, the Bob Hassmiller Excellence in Disaster Services Award, the Partnership Award, and the International Humanitarian Service Award. Other national awards will be presented at the spring ceremony.

Congratulations to all of the winners for this well-deserved honor!

This year the Harriman Award for Distinguished Volunteer Service, the highest recognition for volunteer service in the American Red Cross, goes to Allan I. Goldberg, MD. Allan’s involvement with the American Red Cross began in 1992 as a site blood captain for his employer. He then became Chair of his employer’s Blood Donor Program, and shortly after joined the Penn-Jersey Blood Region Board of Directors, where he also served as Chair.

In 2005, Allan joined the Board of Governors where he served until 2017, including serving as Chair of the Quality and Regulatory Compliance Subcommittee from 2007-2017. In this leadership role, Allan personally contributed to the continuous improvement of Biomedical Services processes and systems by providing oversight and solutions to improve donor and patient safety, which led to the Amended Consent Decree being vacated in 2015.

After the 2010 earthquake, Allan traveled to Haiti and worked in partnership with the American Red Cross to establish a blood bank in Segou, Mali. He also represented the American Red Cross at International Red Cross and Red Crescent meetings in 2011, 2013 and 2015. Throughout Allan’s 26-year tenure as a Red Cross volunteer, he has dedicated himself to ensuring the American public has access to a safe and adequate blood supply. His humanitarian service, selfless giving, and dedication to donor and patient safety leave a legacy that will have a lasting impact on the American Red Cross for decades to come.

The 2018 Susan Hassmiller Nursing Award goes to the American Red Cross of Dayton Area Ohio, which will use the proceeds to develop an online and board game called 24 Hours in a Red Cross Shelter. This game aims to increase student nurse volunteer understanding of sheltering operations, build on existing sheltering courses, and serve as a volunteer nurse recruitment and training resource.

24 Hours in a Red Cross Shelter will be a simulation experience for student nurse volunteers to understand processes and resources for managing a high volume of people needing care and assistance, including planning and prioritizing care for shelter residents with disabilities. The game will be developed in partnership with faculty at Wright State University College of Nursing and Health who will donate time to develop the game, train game leaders, coordinate campus-wide events, and facilitate the gaming experience for students. 24 Hours in a Red Cross Shelter is designed to be easily shared with other Red Cross units.

The Bob Hassmiller Excellence in Disaster Services Award goes to Kevin McCoy of Lakeway, Texas. Kevin has been volunteering with the American Red Cross at the chapter, regional, and national levels for 11 years beginning as a Disaster Services Technology (DST) Volunteer for the American Red Cross serving Central Texas in 2007.

He quickly took on additional roles including DST Regional Program Lead and DST Amateur Radio License Operator. In his role as a DST Amateur Radio Operator, Kevin reached out to the amateur radio community and recruited amateur radio operators to the DST team to help improve communications coverage in central Texas, which has large, open spaces with minimal cell phone coverage.

This has helped to ensure that each chapter within the region has a working amateur radio station with local and long-distance capability and that shelters and other remotely-located facilities have multiple methods of communication during a disaster. As DST Regional Program Lead, Kevin led a tremendous effort during the 2017 Hurricane Harvey response by conducting site surveys for command centers and rapidly installing the critical technology resources required for communications across multiple headquarters locations for the disaster relief operation.

In addition to his formal role, Kevin took on additional responsibilities in onboarding 4,000 event-based volunteers in Austin and putting volunteers who were unable to travel to coastal locations to work filling unmet needs in Austin. In addition to the 11 key volunteer positions he holds in the Central & South Texas Region, Kevin has volunteered for 20 regional and national disaster relief operations. Over the years, Kevin has become known for his dedication to volunteer safety, developing practical solutions to problems, and bringing out the best in those around him.

The 2018 Partnership Award is being presented to Walmart and the Walmart Foundation, vital and innovative partners to the American Red Cross for more than a decade. During the responses to Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria, Walmart quickly activated a customer donation program, which raised more than $5 million in just over 24-hours.

Walmart customers, associates, and the Walmart Foundation ultimately donated more than $60 million to relief efforts. In addition to its financial donations, Walmart partnered with the Red Cross to distribute financial assistance as part of the Hurricane Harvey Immediate Assistance program, helping to put more than $100 million of Red Cross funds directly into the hands of the people who needed it most. Walmart also supplied the Dallas and Houston mega-shelters with Walmart pop-up stores providing shelter residents with free clothing, hygiene products, baby food, diapers, wipes, strollers and much more.

In response to Hurricane Florence earlier this year, Walmart again activated a customer donation program, giving $4 million to the American Red Cross to help those affected by the storm and quickly donated $1 million after Hurricane Michael made landfall in the southeastern U.S. just a couple of weeks ago. Walmart and the Walmart Foundation partner with the Red Cross in other areas by training nurse assistants, sponsoring Reconnection Workshops for members of the military and their families, supporting the installation of more than 50,000 smoke alarms, preparing Gulf Coast businesses and citizens for disaster, training Red Cross logisticians, providing social media expertise, and investing in RC View, the Red Cross geospatial mapping system that has resulted in faster, more efficient disaster responses.

The International Humanitarian Service Award will be presented to the Mexican Red Cross for exemplifying the humanitarian values and principles of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. The Mexican Red Cross has been a longstanding and valued partner of the American Red Cross, participating in annual leadership meetings and helping to launch the North American Humanitarian Response Summit, which represents a unique effort to improve the effectiveness of cross-border response to a potential catastrophic disaster in North America.

In addition, the Mexican Red Cross regularly sends trained staff to assist during disaster response operations in the United States including Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the California Wildfires of 2007, Hurricanes Gustav and Ike in 2008, Hurricane Isaac and Superstorm Sandy in 2012, and flooding in Texas in 2015. In 2017, the Mexican Red Cross was tireless in its support of communities affected by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria, dispatching volunteers to help meet the needs of Spanish-speaking communities. When two devastating earthquakes struck Mexico City, volunteers from the Mexican Red Cross remained in the United States to continue their Hurricane response mission, even as their colleagues at home were mobilizing an emergency response across multiple areas within Mexico.

Throughout these disasters, the Mexican Red Cross and its volunteers embodied the principles of humanity, impartiality, unity, and voluntary service.

Halloween Safety Tips from the Red Cross

Win tickets to the Super Bowl and Help the Red Cross

Now’s your chance to hep the American Red Cross and boost your chances of attending Super Bowl LIII in Atlanta, Georgia!

Tickets are $100 each. The winner receives two tickets to the big game and $2,000 cash.

The drawing is December 13, 2018. To purchase a raffle ticket, contact Liza Cruz at 209-986-0890 or the Community Foundation of San Joaquin at 209-949-2375.

Congratulations, CNA grads!

7-5-18 grad pic 6

Congratulations to our latest Certified Nursing Assistant graduates. These 13 students graduated on August 14 and all earned a place on our honor roll in the top 95-100%!

Well done!

If you are interested in enrolling in CNA training, visit this link.

 

“All is Not Lost”: A Carr Fire Survivor Shares Her Story

Los Angeles-based Red Cross volunteer Carmela Burke recently completed her deployment to the Carr Fire in Redding where she assisted the public affairs team. While there, she got the chance to interview Terry Zeller, a resident whose home burned in the fire.

But thanks to the help from firefighters and the support of friends and neighbors, Zeller said, “All is not lost.”

Read her story here.

Twice is Enough

By Georgia Duncan

“I couldn’t believe it could happen twice.” That’s how Heather Hournay, an Event Based Volunteer with the American Red Cross, began our conversation.

Heather and her family reside in Redding, California. She explained that on Friday the 13th in January, 2017 she and her family were sleeping when her husband awoke and discovered a fire in the ceiling of their daughter’s room. Just as the family had everyone and all the pets out of the house there was an explosion and the home was destroyed.

Heather said her church contacted the Red Cross and a Disaster Action Team arrived at her home. Red Cross volunteers offered the family comfort, gave them much-needed hugs and offered them assistance to get through the next few days. The family began their road to recovery.

Fast-forward to Thursday, July 26, 2018. The Carr Fire began moving toward her new home. Heather and her husband gathered their children, their pet rabbit, Guinea pig and dog and fled to a friend’s home.  As of today she is unsure if she has a home to return to.

Knowing her family was safe, Heather began searching for a place she could help others affected by the fire. She found the shelter at Shasta College that was helping evacuees. She found the Red Cross new volunteer intake area and applied. “It only took about 15 minutes and I was an official Event Based Volunteer,” reported Heather. Immediately she began talking to evacuees, offering a sympathetic ear and when appropriate, a hug. Heather said she has laughed and cried with other in the same situation she finds herself.

When asked she had decided to volunteer, Heather said, “I just had to work and serve to get through this.”

Carr Fire Shelter Update

(Redding, Calif., Saturday, July 28, 2018) — The Red Cross has opened new shelters to accommodate additional evacuees of the Carr Fire.

A new shelter is open at Trinity High School, 321 Victory Lane, Weaverville, CA, 96093. The shelter at Weaverville Elementary School is now closed. Evacuees from that shelter are moving to the Trinity High School site.

In addition, a new shelter is open at Foothill High School, 9733 Deschutes Rd, Palo Cedro, CA, 96073.

Carr Fire evacuees can also visit the following Red Cross shelter sites: 

  • Crosspointe Community Church, 2960 Hartnell Avenue, Redding, CA, 96002
  • Simpson University, 2211 College View Dr, Redding, CA, 96003

The shelter at Shasta Community College, 11555 Old Oregon Trail, Redding, CA, 96003, is at maximum capacity. No additional clients are being accepted at that site.

Anyone is welcome at Red Cross shelters, including those with service animals. Shelter guests can expect a place to sleep, meals, drinks, snacks, comfort and the opportunity to reconnect with loved ones and get information. Red Cross staff is on hand providing health services such as replacing lost medications and eyeglasses, emotional support and spiritual care.

The Red Cross urges everyone to follow evacuation orders from local law enforcement and to have an emergency kit ready to go. Find a shelter by visiting redcross.org or download the free Red Cross Emergency App, which includes wildfire safety tips. The app is available in app stores by searching for American Red Cross or going to redcross.org/apps.

If possible, people who stay in a Red Cross shelter should bring prescription medications, extra clothing, pillows, blankets, hygiene supplies, other comfort items and important documents. It is also recommended to bring special items for children such as diapers, formula and toys.

The Red Cross delivers help to anyone regardless of race, religion, sexual orientation or citizenship status. People who have disaster-caused needs do not need to be American citizens to access Red Cross services.

STAY CONNECTED WITH LOVED ONES: Visit the Red Cross Safe and Well website at redcross.org/safeandwell. The site allows individuals and organizations to register and post messages to indicate that they are safe, or to search for loved ones. The site is always available, open to the public and available in Spanish. Registrations and searches can be done directly on the website.

HOW YOU CAN HELP:  Help people affected by disasters by making a donation to support Red Cross Disaster Relief. Your gift enables the Red Cross to prepare for, respond to, and help people recover from disasters big and small. Call, click, or text to give: visit redcross.org, call 1-800-RED-CROSS or text the word REDCROSS to 90999 to make a $10 donation.

We Need Your Help! Join the Missing Types Campaign Today

This summer, the American Red Cross launched the Missing Types movement to educate the public about what happens when there’s a shortage of blood on hospital shelves. And now, we’re looking at that reality. There is an emergency need for blood.

The easiest way to help? Sign up to donate blood today.
Blood Services Vehicles 2013
Your generosity can help change lives and keep families together. Whether you donate solo or with a friend, patients will be so thankful for your kindness. It only takes about an hour, and your one donation may help save more than one life.

  Join the movement!  
If you aren’t eligible to donate blood, you can still help. Encourage your friends and family to take action and help save lives.