March 15, 2022 | LAKE CHARLES, La. (UM News)
Key points:
- A unique partnership formed by United Methodist, Mennonite and Amish communities is helping with recovery and rebuilding efforts in storm-ridden Lake Charles, Louisiana.
- Each group focuses on a different responsibility, be it labor or case management, so they are stronger together.
- The coalition helps those who’ve fallen through the cracks because they don’t have insurance or can’t afford to hire contractors.
Louisiana residents trying to recover from 18 months of weather disasters are benefiting from a unique partnership formed by United Methodist, Mennonite and Amish communities to help with recovery and rebuilding efforts in storm-ridden Lake Charles.
The coalition consists of the Louisiana Conference of The United Methodist Church, Mennonite Disaster Service and Fuller Center Disaster ReBuilders, a Christian nonprofit organized in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The group helps those who have no other means to repair their storm-damaged homes.
Louisiana recovery 2
Peter L. Yoder (right) talks with Bill Howell about the progress of repairs to a home that was damaged by repeated natural disasters in Lake Charles. Yoder was supervising a volunteer team from the Amish community in Ohio that is part of a new disaster relief coalition. Howell helps manage disaster response for the Louisiana Conference of The United Methodist Church. (Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News)
Western Louisiana in particular has endured a string of weather events that has made recovery difficult. From August 2020 to September 2021, the area was hit by Hurricanes Laura, Delta and Ida, a winter freeze and a local flood caused by over 12 inches of rain. All of this happened during the coronavirus pandemic, which hampered the work of volunteer teams.
How to help
Louisiana Conference disaster relief fund
UMCOR U.S. Disaster Response and Recovery, Advance #901670
“For 16-18 months, only what (people) could do within the community is what got done,” said Bill Howell, director of Missional Engagement and Outreach for the Louisiana Conference. He helps oversee the conference’s disaster relief work.
Howell, retired from the chemical and energy industries, was training to become a missionary before COVID-19 emerged. The pandemic prevented his Volunteers in Mission team from a work trip to the Caribbean, so he contacted the Louisiana Conference to arrange a trip there instead.
He said he certainly wasn’t seeking a job, but “somehow my résumé got into the hands of the bishop and here I am. It’s all been God stuff.”
Louisiana recovery 3
A volunteer from the Amish community in Ohio makes plumbing repairs to a home damaged by natural disasters in Lake Charles. He did not wish to be named. (Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News)
In November 2021, Howell found an ally in Phil Helmuth, volunteer coordinator for Mennonite Disaster Service and equally bad at retirement — Helmuth said he and Howell have “five failed retirements” between them.
“We drove through the city and there was no one working here, yet you have blue tarps and disaster all over,” Helmuth said. “COVID created a bottleneck in terms of response. The way things were in November 2020 is the way they were in November 2021; nothing had changed.”
Louisiana recovery 4
Allen Erb loads trim boards on a Mennonite Disaster Aid trailer at University United Methodist Church in Lake Charles. Erb was part of an Amish and Mennonite volunteer team staying at the church while they repair homes damaged by natural disasters. (Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News)
Helmuth coordinates volunteer work teams from Amish communities, and Howell inquired whether a team could come to Lake Charles in January 2022. At the time, Helmuth said the earliest availability was October. A week later, he received a call from an Amish team whose planned trip had to be postponed by their hosts and they offered to come to Lake Charles instead.
Howell said they started talking around the second week of November, just about the possibility of getting volunteers there, but things moved quickly. On Dec. 5, he said, the project director arrived to survey the area to identify needs in order for the team to arrive Jan. 10.
Louisiana recovery 5
Amish volunteers from Ohio set new joists to level the floor of a storm-damaged home in Lake Charles. (Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News)
He said the coalition was formed even more quickly: A Zoom call to discuss the possibility of a partnership ended with an agreement to work together.
Each group has a different responsibility. The Louisiana Conference handles case management and helps with some funding through the United Methodist Committee on Relief. Mennonite Disaster Service provides the Amish work teams. Fuller Center handles permitting and materials, and connects members with local subcontractors.
Photo essay, video
Every night before he goes to bed, Eugene Mogabgab has a ritual.
"I got some cans of spray and I spray the bed really good, spray the hallway, spray the kitchen. The rats don’t like that stuff,” he said.
Mogabgab’s home in Thibodaux, Louisiana, was severely damaged by Hurricane Ida, which struck the state last August. He doesn’t have insurance or the means to pay workers himself, so nothing has been done to his home for months. Now, he has to deal with mold, rats and roaches...
View United Methodists continue recovery efforts in Louisiana
Watch video on the recovery coalition
“That’s how we complement each other, and we’re much stronger working together than any of us are separately,” Helmuth said.
With contractors in high demand and short supply, those with either insurance money or personal means to pay them were given a priority. The uninsured and renters fell through the cracks, and this is where the coalition steps in.
“Homeowners have tried themselves to do some repairs, and we’ve had to come behind them,” Howell said. “They’ve had no help, just trying to do what they could do.”
In addition to using a crisis hotline to find people in need of help, Howell spoke to local churches for referrals and even went through neighborhoods with door hangers containing contact information. He said they went from having zero cases to more than 50 in six weeks.
“Everything is moving so quickly, I don’t think I can keep up with all the doors God has opened,” Howell said.
One of the door hangers led Debra Duhon to call the coalition.
“I told the Lord that I needed help with this house, and God sent me the right people to get it done,” she said.
Like Duhon’s, many houses in the area are on piers to protect from flooding, but they tend to settle and the floors aren’t level. Much of the work the Amish are doing is leveling floors and ensuring the house is structurally sound before other repairs begin.
“When you walk in a house and start to muck out and bring it down to its bones, and then when you see it finished, it’s just so cool,” said Katherine Howell, Bill’s wife.
Louisiana recovery 6
Hannah Yoder paints the wall of a home in Lake Charles. Yoder, a member of the Amish community in Ohio, was part of a volunteer team repairing homes in the area. (Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News)
Work crews rotate out every two weeks. Many come by bus from Ohio, New York and Pennsylvania, and they stay at University United Methodist Church in Lake Charles, with church volunteers transporting them, since most Amish don’t drive cars.
“My perception of the Amish has changed so much from what stereotypes you may see on TV. They’re very sociable, they laugh and have fun,” said volunteer Elmer Roach. “The one sad thing is I spend two weeks developing relationships with these people and then they go home.”
Louisiana recovery 7
Katherine Howell (left) embraces Debra Duhon outside Duhon’s home, which is being repaired by volunteers, in Lake Charles. Howell is a United Methodist Mission Volunteer and is married to Bill Howell, who helps manage disaster response for the Louisiana Conference of The United Methodist Church. (Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News)
At the end of each team’s two weeks, the church hosts a celebratory dinner cooked by Amish volunteers where the teams get to spend time with the homeowners they’ve helped. If they’ve finished the home, the keys and a housewarming gift like a Bible or prayer shawl are presented to the homeowner.
Duhon was able to thank the crew that had been working on her home for the past two weeks.
Louisiana recovery 8
Amish women sing a hymn during a dinner at University United Methodist Church in Lake Charles to celebrate their two-week stint as volunteers helping to repair storm-damaged homes in the area. (Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News)
“All I can do is give it up to God, because I never gave up on this little raggedy house,” she said. “Y’all put a smile on my face.”
With their retirement home over 700 miles away in Jacksonville, Florida, the Howells are living in a converted classroom at St. Luke-Simpson United Methodist Church in Lake Charles. They’ve been there since October 2021, and Bill Howell said they’ll be there “for the duration.”
Louisiana recovery 9
Debra Duhon (left) and Katherine Howell hold hands as they survey the progress of repairs to Duhon’s storm-damaged home in Lake Charles. (Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News)
Joey Butler is a multimedia producer/editor and Mike DuBose is staff photographer for United Methodist News.