Home » ExchangeEveryDay » California Wildfires Report



ExchangeEveryDay Past Issues


<< Previous Issue | View Past Issues | | Next Issue >> ExchangeEveryDay
California Wildfires Report
October 26, 2007
May your choices reflect your hopes, not your fears.
-Nelson Mandela
We have been following developments in Southern California with great sadness. We have been trying to determine how child care centers, family child care homes and early childhood professionals have been impacted by this disaster. This has proved difficult, however, as those most affected by the fires have been evacuated and are unreachable. So we will share what news we currently have about what is happening and what you can do, and then update you with more complete information as things sort themselves out. This will be a longer message than usual in ExchangeEveryDay as we have much to share.

A Personal Story
We will lead with a very personal account from a friend of Karen Stephens from San Diego �" a story that is undoubtedly echoed a million times over:

"Our wakeup call was the doorbell ringing repeatedly at 2:30 this morning. (That's NEVER good.) Once I was coherent, I smelled the smoke. I ran to the door and our neighbor was yelling that we had to get out and that the fire was up the hill. Keep in mind, at bedtime, the fires were 20 miles away at the closest place. We had absolutely no reason to believe our house was going to be threatened, but that's Mother Nature for you. Sometime between 11 pm-2:30 am, embers from one of those fires started the fire near our house. At that time, the wind was so strong that ash was flying EVERYWHERE. The smoke was already really thick and we thought we didn't have much time to get out. Not surprisingly, we grabbed photos from the walls, our computers, and the dogs �" and got out. You know what is important to us, as we left our jewelry, golf clubs, etc. All of those things can be replaced. The photos and the pups are way more important to us."

Helping Children Cope

Karen Stephens updated a Parenting Exchange article "Helping Children Cope in the Wake of Tragedy or Disaster" from her Parenting Exchange on CD collection.

Report from Bright Horizons
This national employer-focused child care provider reports that as of Thursday all their centers in Southern California are back in operation. However, they did share these experiences:

"Employees have demonstrated incredible passion and commitment to each other and the children they care for. While many came to work with their cars packed and ready to evacuate if the order came, those who were not under threat of evacuation opened their homes to their colleagues, went to work at the centers that remained open so they could provide relief to others.... Dozens of our employees and the families we serve were evacuated from their homes. Most were able to stay with friends and family �" and many with their Bright Horizons colleagues, during the evacuation period. As of today, all but three employees were able to return to their homes. One employee lost the home she was living in, and there are three who are still uncertain about the fates of their homes. We have also confirmed at least one family we serve who lost their home. [Update: One of these employees went back to discover that her house was the only one left standing in her block.]

"We have been able to provide emergency child care to employees of the San Diego area's major utility companies at other San Diego and Los Angeles area Bright Horizons centers so those employees could work to repair and maintain power and communications lines.

"We are also making available through all Bright Horizons centers and several aid organizations, for free, Jim Greenman's book, What Happened to My World: Helping Children Cope with Natural Disaster and Catastrophe. This is a guide for parents, teachers, and caregivers that can give them guidance about how they can support children who are experiencing the stress, anxiety, and destruction of the fires. It is also available for download free at www.brighthorizons.com/talktochildren. We invite anyone in the Early Education community to download it for their use, or to let us know of a need for large numbers of these, as we can make hard copies available in quantity wherever the need exists."

Report from Save the Children
World Forum Alliance member, Save the Children USA, has been very active in supporting the needs of children during this emergency. Read the on-the-scene stories of Save staffers.

You can make a donation to support the work of Save the Children in Southern California.

Report from Knowledge Learning Corporation
The largest provider of child care services in the country, Knowledge Learning Corporation, closed 25 schools during the fire emergency �" 18 due to mandatory evacuation. The company reports that its disaster recovery plans implemented after Katrina have proved to be most effective in enabling them to respond quickly and effectively to this disaster. The company has had staff in the area checking up on schools and providing updates every 30 minutes.

Blood Donations Needed
One of the most urgent needs is for blood donations that people everywhere can respond to. To learn how and where you can donate blood, go to the Red Cross.

ExchangeEveryDay

Delivered five days a week containing news, success stories, solutions, trend reports, and much more.

What is ExchangeEveryDay?

ExchangeEveryDay is the official electronic newsletter for Exchange Press. It is delivered five days a week containing news stories, success stories, solutions, trend reports, and much more.

Find your way to Teaching Strategies' big purple booth #823 at the NAEYC Annual Conference on November 7 through 10, 2007. Drop by to follow The Creative Curriculum System Road Map and earn a free gift. Learn more about Teaching Strategies' events at the NAEYC Annual Conference.


Comments (5)

Displaying All 5 Comments
gail landers · October 27, 2007
United States


I too live in at "at risk" area surrounded by natural beauty. I am a flood survivor and can empathize with the evacuees. It's a confusing and tiring time. Losing irreplacable things is emotional. Keeping routine and accepting help is necessary. The sound of the wind and helicoptor choppers still sometimes gives me shivers. It has been almost 12 years...but I continue to live "down stream". And, one of my children is now an emergency worker for the NFS.

Kathleen Seabolt · October 27, 2007
Pittsford, New York, United States


As a child care director who has evacuated three centers in 15 years, two due to firestorm, please know my fervent prayers are with all those impacted by the fires.

As survivors of the 2003 Cedar Fire - our family watched with horror the news this week from our new home in New York state. Our CA relatives were safely evacuated and my brother was able to evacuate our horses before the mountain roads were closed. He then used the trailer to evacuate horses from Camp Pendleton to Del Mar. We had friends who evacuated, then were able to return home where they took in evacuated senior citizens. The horror seemed to be transcended by love and for this week all persons in San Diego appeared to be neighbors in the best sense of that word.

I realize the news will become analytical and increasingly critical of official response efforts. But it is important to also focus on what went right. It is heartening to see that when faced with incredible loss - the average people rolled up their sleeves, extended hands to each other in friendship, and turned into a community of support and empathy.

There will be so much work as folks are allowed back into their neighborhoods. Clean-up is a ghastly, emotional job. Locals can help by distributing masks, goggles and gloves and showing up to help with grunt work (especially for seniors) with shovels, wheelbarrows and trash bags. This goes for our child care centers. The roofs and exterior walls will be encrusted with grime, as will the playground equipment and surfaces. Parents that wish to help should offer their services to their daycare directors to facilitate a thorough outdoor cleaning (top down) and replacement of sand so that children can safely get back outside as soon as possible. Also, in a few weeks time, a tree planting ceremony might be a soothing event for any child care that was threatened.

Love to all our Southern CA colleagues.

Karen November · October 26, 2007
Los Angeles, United States


Fire Damage to preschool in Los Angeles area
Malibu Presbyterian Church
Preschool director of Temple Isaiah (Tamar Andrews [email protected] is in communication with church

Pam Grigsby Jones · October 26, 2007
Child Care and Educational Services
Olympia, wa, United States


Thank you for the update, and please continue to let us know how we can help. Not only do we feel less helpless when we can contribute something, but hearing of how others handle crisis is a learning experience for us. Thanks Bonnie and Roger for being our conduit!

Margo · October 26, 2007
Downtown Baltimore Child Care
Baltimore, Maryland, United States


Bonnie and Roger,
Thanks for you report on this natural disaster. I manage a two-site child care organization in Baltimore, and teach on-line for Pacific Oaks College. Two of my on-line students, who live in Southern CA were evacuated and as of last nght do not know if they have homes to return to.
My heart bleeds for them, their families and all involved in this tragedy.
You mention a diasater plan written by Knowledge Learning Corp. Would they be willing to share their plan with centers that have less resources to develop their own?
Thanks again for your committement to all of ECE!
Margo Sipes



Post a Comment

Have an account? to submit your comment.


required

Your e-mail address will not be visible to other website visitors.
required
required
required

Check the box below, to help verify that you are not a bot. Doing so helps prevent automated programs from abusing this form.



Disclaimer: Exchange reserves the right to remove any comments at its discretion or reprint posted comments in other Exchange materials.