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ACS Center Steps out in Faith and Makes a Difference

By: Judy Klein, Office of Communication at Michigan Conference

Berrien Springs, MI—Neighbor 2 Neighbor is a self-supporting ACS center, sustained by its own thrift store, run, and operated by four employees, and over 100 volunteers. Some volunteers are non-Adventist. This is significant, because according to Laura Meyer, director of Neighbor 2 Neighbor (N2N), volunteering is a ministry for the volunteers, and the volunteers are a ministry themselves.

Many of the volunteers who work at the center are dedicated to the work. They come in on weekends and holidays. Meyer reports that when she stopped by on 4th of July, there were at least ten volunteers hard at work. Many volunteers are widows, or are grieving, others are from the court system, serving mandatory community service. N2N finds a place for all of them, and mentors them. Often, we brush aside the opportunity to work with non-Adventist volunteers, but we need to refocus our mindset. Not only can you be a blessing to them, but non-Adventist volunteers can bless you as well!

Andrews University is just around the corner from N2N’s facility, and up to five social work students volunteer to handle client case files. Without all of the work of the volunteers and students, N2N’s work would be impossible.

There’s lots of work to do. Food must be bought for the clients, and grants for food and supplies must be written, and there’s the thrift store too! Thousands of pounds of donations are received, sorted, tagged, priced, put out to sell, and then taken back if unsold after two months. Each month’s merchandise is tagged with a different color so staff and volunteers can keep track of inventory. Meyer and her volunteers have a recycling system for clothes that cannot be used.

The thrift store is open Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays from 10:00 am – 6:00 pm. Client services are open on the same days from 10:00 am – 4:00 pm.

When clients arrive at N2N, they are greeted by a smiling receptionist, and then whisked into an assessment room, where their needs are discussed with a volunteer or social worker. They are then given according to their needs. Meyer allows them to choose food that they need, so that they will use it. Meyers uses the example of rice and beans, an ethnic food that some people do not know how to cook without, but a food that others do not know how to cook in the least! Each client also gets two vouchers for the thrift store, which is good for two pieces of furniture, and fifteen dollars’ worth of towels and linens. The client is also given a gift certificate worth thirty dollars for each member of their family. This can be used on clothing, shoes, belts, and purses, and can be received every three months.

This means that children can be outfitted for school, and for the seasonal changes. In addition, in the winter, they may allot a little more money to each client, as coats are more expensive.

Some university students struggle to make ends meet, and Neighbor 2 Neighbor helps students too! If students need a desk, lamp, and a desk chair, they can receive these items for free. A lot of seminary students and international students are very poor, and they are also eligible for food and clothes.

Due to N2N’s well-known location, Feeding America has partnered with Neighbor 2 Neighbor to have food drives in the parking lot. There have been three since the pandemic in 2020, and Meyer reports that there will be more.

N2N has been blessed with a wonderful facility, and Meyer is making good use of it. “We have space,” she says, and Meyer and her team will let anyone from the community use that space for anything that is appropriate. It takes time and work to plan, which makes it difficult for the team to utilize the space as they could: “Planning is a lot of work,” says Meyer, “but we can use the space!” Planning takes more time than they have, but partnering with local groups means that the space can be used as a blessing to the community.

The space is often utilized for classes such as drug recovery programs, financial literacy, or counseling. A quilting group even uses the space. Another benefit is that some community members are intimidated to go onto campus for counseling, but because N2N is such a well-known community help, it is less intimidating, and community members are more willing to come into facility for programs. Chelli Ringstaff, ACS director, comments that N2N has “cultivated a safe place” for the community.

At the moment, the facility is under construction. There will be a second room for community meetings, which will be soundproof, for confidential counseling.

The construction began in 2020, with the new thrift store. N2N was in a rough place. They had used all of their income, and depleted their reserves, but they still needed a new parking lot, as well as the rest of the facility being renovated.

Meyer and her team were convicted to step out in faith and go ahead with renovations. “It was a big step of faith,” says Meyer, “but if we didn’t step out ahead, it wouldn’t be faith. If we had it all worked out, it wouldn’t be faith.”

They stepped out in faith, and the Lord blessed. The parking lot was provided by a large donation from a member, and money poured in from the surrounding churches. The Lord showed Meyers and her team that He was in control, and that they had nothing to fear for the future.

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Disaster Response Floods Local Church Local Conference NEWS Uncategorized

Jackson Water Crisis

The South Central Conference Adventist Community Service Disaster Response Team (ACS DR) has partnered with the members of the South Mississippi churches, to provide some relief for the water crisis in Jackson Mississippi.  The city’s clean water shortage happened after the city experienced a high level of flooding due to heavy rainfall over the last week, leaving the city without enough safe water for people to use. Read More

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I-Care Food Pantry Feeds Tuscaloosa Community

Rebecca Billingsley and her dedicated volunteers at the Maranatha SDA Church’s “I-Care Food Pantry” in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, participated in a food distribution on July 8, 2022, for the community. Seven pallets of food were delivered from the West Alabama Food Bank to the church’s parking lot where lines of people and cars assembled to pick up fresh and frozen meats, fresh vegetables, bread, and non-perishable food items. Many people called back later after the event to express their gratitude for being able to obtain extra food that month which supplemented their food supply.

 

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Eastern Kentucky Flooding Relief Efforts

Would you like to help in the relief efforts? The Kentucky-Tennessee Conference is buying supplies to assist in the flooding recovery. They are also supporting volunteers. If you would like to make a monetary donation, all funds proceeding to the relief efforts, please go to Kentucky-Tennessee Conference website and you can make a contribution online under “KYTN Disaster relief.”


Mail Checks to:

KYTN Disaster Relief Fund
850 Conference Dr. #B
Goodlettsville, TN 37072

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ACS Ends Marshall Fire Recovery Efforts After Five Months

The Rocky Mountain Conference ACS Disaster Response team was engaged in the Marshall Fire Recovery efforts from January through May of this year. The fire which started on December 30, 2021 at the intersection of Colorado 93 and Marshall Road around 11:00 am had reached the town of Superior by noon, and later spread to the cities of Louisville, Broomfield, and unincorporated Boulder County, forcing tens of thousands of people to evacuate. Two people were killed, over 1,000 homes destroyed, and more than 6,000 acres burned in Colorado’s most destructive wildfire.

The ACS team, under the leadership of Cathy Kissner, Rocky Mountain ACS Director, managed the Collection/Distribution Center which was set up at the Flatiron Mall in Broomfield. It was open seven days a week during these five months, except for two days when they closed due to a winter storm. Donations of various items such as food, clothing, backpacks, shoes, water bottles, bicycles, personal hygiene kits, and kitchen kits poured in to assist the affected community. Our team partnered with Spark the Change to establish a volunteer base through which we were able to recruit the volunteers needed. 

During this five-month period, 3,000 family units were served and 750,000 items were distributed. Kissner declared she’d never been so proud of her team and hopes this opportunity to serve will encourage individuals to join ACS in these type of efforts. “I commend those involved and am ever so thankful for Cathy Kissner and her strong team of Volunteers,” stated W. Derrick Lea, NAD ACS Executive Director. “Many new lessons were learned during this event, but the greatest lesson showed us what could be accomplished by pooling our efforts with others in the community for the greater good of those served,” added Lea.

 

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Disaster Response Floods Local Church Local Conference Uncategorized

ACS Responds to Catastrophic Flooding in Montana

On June 13, 2022, catastrophic flooding due to heavy rainfall and rapid snowmelt resulted in the closure of Yellowstone National Park with over 10,000 tourists evacuated. The unprecedented flooding has caused massive destruction in several surrounding communities in Southwest Montana. Road closures, collapsed bridges, damage to homes and property are forcing residents to evacuate. The Montana Conference ACS Disaster Response team has been engaged in the Recovery Efforts under the coordination of ACS Director, Gabriele Miranda-Laub.

A group of volunteers led by ACS trained member, Sheila Elwin, helped clean out areas in Livingston that were flooded and distributed 5-gallon flood buckets filled with cleaning supplies. The Southwest Montana COAD organized a Multi-Agency Resource Center (MARC) at the Livingston Fairgrounds where people could come and get information for help from various organizations, including the State of Montana and FEMA. A MARC was also held in Gardiner last Sabbath where buckets donated by a local company were distributed.

Pastor Carlile and church members from the Billings and Bridger churches responded in the Red Lodge and Fromberg areas. Hundred flood buckets filled with cleaning supplies donated by the Upper Columbia Conference, and 200 blankets as well as some comfort kits were distributed in Fromberg. “The buckets represent a collaborative effort of ACS, Pathfinders, and NPUC Disaster Response Coordinator. Thank you to Richie Brower and Pathfinders, Larry Mays (NPUC Disaster Response Coordinator), and others who assisted in filling these buckets several months ago in readiness of such a disaster occurring,” stated Patty Marsh, ACS Director of Upper Columbia Conference.

“I want to thank all of the volunteers, as well as the Upper Columbia Conference, that have been serving in our conference and state. ‘In Christ’s name’…is what we do. God Bless each one of you, stated Miranda-Laub.

Let us keep the affected communities in prayer as they cope with this tragedy.

The Red Lodge community inundated by recent Montana flooding. Photo Credit: Chris Sullivan, NBC Montana.

 

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Community Disaster Response Fires Uncategorized

Denver Channel 7 News Assists ACS DR with Fire Relief

The Cameron Peak fire is declared to be the largest recorded wildfire in the history of Colorado State. It started near Chambers Lake on August 13, 2020 and was declared 100% contained on December 2, 2020.

By Cathy Kissner – Loveland, Colorado

The Cameron Peak Fire Recovery Center was bolstered on December 7 by Denver Channel 7 News who collected donations for those affected by the Cameron Peak Fire that burned areas around Red Feather, Glen Haven, and Estes Park west of Fort Collins. The largest fire in Colorado, it took more than four months for fire crews to get the fire contained. After burning more than 200,000 acres, it left 40 homes completely destroyed and more than 200 homes with heavy smoke damage.

“This is one of the largest donations we have ever received from a news channel,” explained Cathy Kissner, director of Adventist Community Services and Disaster Relief for the Rocky Mountain Conference. “The people affected by this fire will receive these much-needed items which will help in their recovery as they find new footing and a new normal for their lives.”

Donations were delivered to the Adventist Community Services Disaster Response Center in the Outlet Mall of Loveland for the Cameron Peak Fire Recovery where site manager June Spaulding and her team were happy to receive them. Among items donated were new pillows, washcloths, diapers, shovels, rakes, lawn carts, tools, and hoses.

The Center has also received quilts and comforters from a quilting club and from the ACS Center in Loveland. The Distribution Center was open until December 28 to serve those impacted by the Cameron Peak fire.

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PACS and Other Portland Food Pantries Adapt to Extraordinary Demand

‘We are experiencing what may be a hundred-year flood of hunger,’ says Oregon Food Bank’s CEO

Although many Oregon businesses have reopened and unemployment numbers have declined, local food pantries remain busier than ever.

The first few weeks of the coronavirus pandemic in March were filled with uncertainty. Pantries initially asked their customers to stay home while they rushed to figure out how to distribute goods with safe social distancing practices.

Five months later, the Oregon Food Bank reported about 100 pantries had closed statewide, out of 1,400. The sites that closed were primarily senior services centers that innately created high-risk environments, but the remaining pantries have thrived despite the new safety challenges and upswing in visitors.

“It’s been a great testament of teamwork,” said Ashley Mumm, Public Relations Manager of the Oregon Food Bank. “It’s just amazing that we have not heard of anybody turned away because there wasn’t enough food, except in one instance. We estimate that we will serve (more than) 1 million people this year, when in years prior, we were serving 860,000.”

In August, the state’s Department of Environmental Quality awarded the Oregon Food Bank a $140,000 grant to be used for transporting and processing excess food from West Coast growers. Due to the pandemic, much of the produce that would typically go to restaurants was headed for landfills. With the grant, however, 2 million pounds of fresh produce will be rerouted through food pantries instead.

“We are experiencing what may be a hundred-year flood of hunger — certainly the greatest food insecurity in at least a generation,” Oregon Food Bank CEO Susannah Morgan said upon receiving the grant.

Street Roots visited three Portland-based food pantries to see how they’ve adapted their operations in light of the pandemic.

   

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ACS DR Continues in Fayetteville and New Bern

ACS DR Teams and volunteers from both the Carolina and South Atlantic conferences are working tirelessly to provide relief to communities within the State of North Carolina. On Tuesday morning, they joined the Abney Chapel SDA Church in Fayetteville, NC, to assist with food distribution. Individuals that have been affected arrived at the Community Center to get both hot meals and nonperishable food items. Despite the challenging situation, many had pleasant and even jovial conversations with our Team members. Several of our partners from the city and faith-based communities have made donations to our Community Center. Some of the city leaders have even asked our Teams to assist them also during this tragic time. The Carolina Conference ACS DR Director, Phil Rosburg, opened up a Warehouse in Winnesboro, South Carolina to receive and stock donated products. He delivered a 28-foot truck from the Warehouse stocked with needed items for a Distribution that took place at the Ephesus SDA Church later this week.

The flood waters had severely affected homes in the communities and surrounding areas. Residents were desperate for food as many of their homes had taken on water and contaminated the products they had. With stores still not open, many were unable to obtain necessities needed for daily living. On Wednesday morning, the Ephesus Church building and parking lot turned into a Distribution site for the community. People from the neighborhood who had come for our services were accompanied by our Team members and given food supplies and household items. For seniors and others who could not carry their own items, young volunteers used hand trucks to carry these items for them. Community members were also offered a hot meal prepared by a local chef and served by ACS DR members.

W. Derrick Lea, NAD ACS DR Director, met with the Carolina Conference ACS Director and the pastor and staff of the English SDA Church in New Bern of how best to assist the community. Their sister Church, the New Bern Spanish SDA Church, had been housing over 200 people in their church building who had run out of food, and were apprehensive about seeking governmental help as IDs were being requested. However, the church was decimated with over six feet of water during the height of Florence. The airplane delivery of food was helpful in sustaining the people during their initial recovery. All of those that were being housed had to be evacuated and now were spread out in the city at various shelters.

As the current needs of the affected population are being discussed, it was pointed out that the greatest need was for shelter and cleaning materials. Many stories and testimonies were shared of families that had lost everything. Our Warehouse in Winnesboro will continue to be involved in distributing supplies to the communities in both Fayetteville and New Bern. The Ephesus and the New Bern English churches will work together to determine how supplies are delivered in the most efficient way for the two communities that have experienced this traumatic event.

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Disaster Response Floods Uncategorized

Arkansas Floods

The State of Arkansas has been heavily impacted by the recent Missouri floods. The waters from Missouri have flowed into Arkansas, resulting in substantial flooding. For days the rain continued filling the Black River, causing levees in several communities to overflow and break. The effects of these events had devastating consequences on the towns of Georgetown, Pocahontas, DesArc, and Bescoe. The Arkansas/Louisiana ACS DR Coordinator, Lavida Whitson, is leading out a team in the operation of small Warehouses that are currently distributing needed items to the local communities.

ACS is partnering with various faith-based organizations such as the Red Cross, LDS, and others that had donated goods to us for previous disasters sitting at a Warehouse ready for use. The International Paper Company donated 1000 boxes to be used for distribution. Payron Elementary, a local public school in Clarksville, also set up a collection center for bleach. By the end of their call they had secured about 200 bottles of bleach which were distributed, along with food and other household supplies.

On Memorial Day, there were approximately 15 volunteers who took their holiday to serve their community. They not only distributed supplies, but also spoke with many survivors that were uncertain about how they would manage through the next day. ACS DR provided some resources, and in areas where we couldn’t help we tried to connect them with other organizations that might offer the assistance needed. “The one thing you quickly realize when working on a Disaster is how many it takes to truly have an impact on a community affected by Disaster. It’s encouraging to see we have such competent, dedicated people working in every community within the Division,” said W. Derrick Lea, NAD ACS DR Director.