A Helping Hand

Update Unfortunately, there was one levee outside of Winfield we couldn't save.


second update Steve Ley, one of the two men in the photograph in the post, also wrote of today's experience.


third update The Salvation Army has set up a localized fund to help flood victims in Missouri.


I wish I could say I acquitted myself well sandbagging today, but I really was a wuss.

I arrived at the high school in Winfield a little after 2 to find a bustling sandbagging operation underway. However, rather than dig in, we new volunteers had to wait in line to get a badge with picture. After over half an hour standing in the sun, the powers that be evidently decided they were in danger of losing volunteers because they let those who had ID start work.

Later, I found that the place did have prisoners from a local prison helping, so I'm assuming the security was related to them. Otherwise, our country has gotten a little too paranoid if we're worried about protecting piles of dirt.

I partnered immediately with a man who was on his second day of sandbagging and a young woman (Breanna, who said hi in comments) who lived in the local area, both of whom had extraordinary energy, as well as being enjoyable to be around. I didn't get a picture of the man, but I did Breanna. Behind her were twins who also partnered with us when they weren't hauling bags to pallets.

Sandbagging

Next to us were two gentlemen who also had come up from St. Louis, Dogtown to be exact. They were a great deal of fun, and we found that we shared a lot in common, including careers in tech, and possibly even people who we mutually knew in the tech/online world. Talk about small world. I also think they bagged about 10 bags for every one I helped fill. Still, I like to think that there's a levee somewhere, just about to fail when one last sandbag is placed on the top, keeping that last drop of water out. And I'll have filled that bag.

Well, maybe I am being a tad fanciful.

Sandbagging

Following is a wider view of the operation. As you can see from the mounds of sandbags, people came to work, and work they did.

Sandbagging

Tonight I'm sunburned, with a headache that just won't go away. However, I think I can drag my butt out tomorrow, early in the morning this time, and see if I can't fill that last bag that saves that last levee.

In the meantime, the American Red Cross is out of money. Our country has had some difficult times in the last few years, people aren't donating as much, and the result is that the American Red Cross is now having to borrow in order to help the folks in the Midwest. Not to mention that we're only now heading into hurricane season.

I know you're broke, I'm broke, we're all broke and gas and food prices are horrid, but if you can see your way to dropping a few dollars into the Red Cross bin, you'd be helping a lot of people who have lost everything.

If the Red Cross is not your bag, and you want to help a more local organization, the Missouri Humane Society is known nationally for its pet recovery and sanctuary during weather events such as floods. The organization was in Iowa rescuing pets, and now is working to help people in Illinois and Missouri not only by actively rescuing pets trapped in the floods, but also by taking in pets for those who have no place to keep them.

If you can find your way to help out a little, I promise I'll bag more sand. I'll even name a bag after you. Who knows, maybe yours will be the bag that stopped the drop of water that saved the levee that saved the town.

Sandbagging

Comments

You had a hand in filling lots of bags and making the experience more rewarding for the people around you. You also have a story to show others how easy it is to help out.

Maybe it is your one bag that stops the water from breaking over, and maybe it's your story and energy that indirectly leads to the extra 1,000 bags that save the next town!

Thanks for posting, I'm so happy and humbled to have met you today.
-Steve

Thanks for the kind words, Steve. I really enjoyed chatting with another computer/industrial psychologist geek. We're not exactly coming out of the woodwork.

I hope more volunteers show up today. With cloud cover, it should be easier work.

I moved to Iowa City just as the flood waters of '93 were receding. This is far worse. I live about 3 blocks from the worst flooded area in Coralville, it was the first to flood, even before Cedar Rapids. I'm up on a hill and safe, but everyone in the neighborhood is distraught. Neighbors are taking in neighbors who have lost their homes, but there is no outside aid coming here. Oh but George Bush is coming for a photo op tomorrow. That ought to help a lot (yeah right).

I just returned from visiting some friends in Cedar Rapids. One woman said she's doing cleanup in downtown Cedar Rapids. She said she can't believe what she sees every day. She described seeing a concrete planter 6ft in diameter, weighing hundreds of pounds, uprooted and washed blocks from its original location. Then she found an ATM machine lying in the middle of the street, it had markings on it that indicated it washed downstream from Waterloo. That's about 50 miles.

Cedar Rapids' city slogan is "The City of Five Seasons" but everyone derisively refers to it as "The City of Five Smells" because there are 5 cereal plants in the middle of town that constantly emit a horrible, overpowering stench of grain. For the first time in modern history, those smells are totally absent. Now it smells like contaminated muddy sludge and sewage. That's even more horrible. If you like breakfast cereal, you better stock up now as they won't be making any more for quite a while.

Iowa received the worst of this flood. I can't believe how much devastation has happened in that state. I hope that relief does come, soon.

What was worse is the force of the floods because of broken levees. These should have been shored before now. Levees protecting major population centers should never been allowed to be that weak. A slow rising flood is one thing; a flood from a broken levee kills people.

Your note on the cereal plants is a timely one. People forget that midwest floods are not local events--that everyone is impacted.

In Missouri, some of our smaller towns are getting hit, but many are important from a historic perspective, which is why it tears our heart to see them damaged. What's worse overall is that a massive amount of crop land is being inundated with toxic sludge.