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Rockaways Resilience Network Working Group

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This working group is focused on resilience efforts in Rockaway.

The mission of this working group is to focus on resilience efforts in Rockaway.

Working Group email address:

***@***.***

Members

Albert Gomez Alisa Keesey Alison Thompson Amanda Cole Andrew Larsen ARFARF
Bob Ross bsteckler Cat Graham Christina Karaba EvertB Greg Horwitch
Jeff Williams John Hoffman John Wysham Jonathan Rose Kathy Gilbeaux Katie Rast
kevinjones Linton Wells Little Dennis Lulu Mayorga Maeryn Obley Mary Beth Harvey
mdmcdonald Melissa Berman Michael Gresalfi Michelle Cortez Mike Taylor Natalie West
Rahul Gupta Rebekkah Thompson Samuel Bendett spraissman Tom McGinn Walter Meyer

Email address for group

rockaways-resilience-network-working-group@m.resiliencesystem.org

Music Video - Song for Rockaway (Ain't No One Here But Us Volunteers) - by Amanda Cole

from Amanda Cole . . .

This song is for my fellow volunteers who did time in Rockaway, NY that first few weeks after Hurricane Sandy, and for all the folks who are struggling still in freezing/moldy homes, and within a system that needs to catch up to their life threatening needs, hear them out, and help them now, before another ice-block week passes.

Song for Rockaway (Ain't No One Here But Us Volunteers)

Rockaways Long Term Recovery Planning

READY ROCKAWAY, FEMA, & NYC VOAD INVITE YOU TO THE ROCKAWAY & BROAD CHANNEL
LONG TERM RECOVERY PLANNING MEETING

*WHEN:* Thursday January 24th from 6pm - 9pm
Please note the change of address; 454 beach 67th St. Battalion church

*WHAT:* Long term planning and communication is essential to the recovery
of the Rockaways. We invite you to join us in a Long Term Recovery Planning
Meeting, the goal of which, is to give you an opportunity to join together
and work toward a consolidated recovery effort.

During this meeting we will invite you and/or your organization to join
select recovery committees so that you can bring your expertise and
resources to the group.

Cuomo To Sandy Victims Along Coastline: "Move On"

FEMA's 100 and 500-year flood mapFrom: NYC Mayor's Office

gothamist.com - by Christopher Robbins - January 24th, 2013

 

Using language couched in euphemisms, Governor Cuomo is urging residents whose homes sit along coastlines and were destroyed by Hurricane Sandy to sell their property and "move on." "At one point, you have to say maybe Mother Nature doesn't want you here," the governor told the editorial board of the Daily News."Maybe she's trying to tell you something."

Sanctuary From Storm Is a School Again

St. Francis de Sales

Photo: Michael Nagle

nytimes.com - by Sarah Maslin Nir - january 22, 2013

Since the hurricane charged through the Belle Harbor enclave of the Rockaway Peninsula, the redbrick church of St. Francis de Sales has been the heart of the area’s relief initiatives, even as it was itself battered. The warped floors of its adjacent grade school’s soaked gymnasium became a sanctuary to thousands of people a day who came here for hot food and dry clothes.

It seemed that the only people to whom St. Francis was closed were the more than 500 children and staff members of its Roman Catholic school; they spent the past three months at a makeshift school in another borough, while their school — so badly flooded that police scuba divers had to spelunk through the rectory’s basement at one point — hosted the relief effort and was repaired.

NYC.gov - Stress and Mental Health Issues - Hurricane Sandy Recovery and Your Health

                                               List of mental health clinics in the Rockaways (PDF)

     

NYC.gov

 

Stress from a traumatic event like Hurricane Sandy is normal, but sometimes it can feel overwhelming. Help is available for you during this difficult time.

What You Should Know

Most people who live through disasters will feel some level of distress. Anxiety, sadness, sleeplessness, shock and other emotional and physical reactions are common after traumatic events.

CNN iReport - Alison Thompson Gives Another Report From The Rockaways

CNN iReport - by Doug Kuntz - January 21, 2013

Three days after Congress passes The Sandy Relief Bill, as critical needs continue in the New York area, Third Wave Volunteer Alison Thompson gives a second report from The Rockaways.

As the first sustained cold weather settles into the area, thousands upon thousands remain without heat and electric.

http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-913656

House approves $50.7 billion Sandy bill

House approves $50.7 billion Sandy bill

Updated at 09:00 PM today

Rockaway Residents to Congress: Walk a Mile in Our Shoes

Walk A MileBy beachtar  |  Posted January 12, 2013  |  Belle Harbor, New York

 

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