Disaster fund donations top $74,000; city council to formally ask for help from the province on Thursday.

News 100 redBy Pepper Parr

August 13, 2014

BURLINGTON, ON.

City council will be meeting Thursday morning to consider asking the province to declare parts of the city a disaster area – which is a necessary prelude to being approved for disaster relief funding.

While the public hears of the horrific damage done to individual homeowners and their property – the city is looking at its infrastructure and figuring out the cost of repairing, and replacing in some instances, pipes and roadways.

During the December ice storm the city received approximately $2.2 million from the province to cover the cost of the damage.  There was no funding for private individuals.

Flood - Palmer Drive - with bin

There was a time when bins in the driveway meant renovations and upgrades – for the month of August and on into the fall they identify those homes with serious water damage from the August 4th flooding.

The Council meeting might be focused on the recovery of funds for the infrastructure.  The people that voted the seven members of council into office have a more pressing problem – repairing their homes and figuring out how they are going to pay for refrigerators, freezers, air conditioners and furnaces when insurance coverage is at the as low as $5000 with some people having $15,000 in coverage.

Funds for individuals will not come from the city. Those funds will come from community fund raising that will get matched by the province on a two for one basis. The rules are such that not a dime of city money can be used to pay for individual losses.

A private fund raising arm has to be put in place – that was done last Friday when the United Way stepped up and made their information technology system available.  Funds began flowing into the United Way account within hours and as of 5:00 pm Wednesday the United Way had collected $74,400 in donations.

Donations can be made on line on a secure site that issues a tax receipt automatically.   Click on that red line – and be generous

Once the request for a declaration that Burlington is a disaster area has been approved by the Minister of Housing and Community Services; Burlington neighbour Ted McMeekin –  the city will then create a Disaster Relief Committee that will oversee the collection and disbursement of funds.

Fire fighter Flood Relief form

The fire fighters are making their man power – the woman as well – available to those who need help. The form on their web site sets out time slots that are available.

There are a number of local grass roots opportunities to raise funds.  This weekend the city will be holding a two day Children’s Festival on the waterfront.  Someone should round up half a dozen clean oil drums, paint them bright yellow and have signs made up: Disaster Relief funding – and watch the $20 bills come out of wallets.

Later in the month Rib Fest takes place  – another opportunity to raise funds.  People want to help and they will help – if you give them the opportunity.

Ward 2 Councillor Marianne Meed Ward is married to Pete Ward who at one time headed up fund raising for World Vision – and those guys knew how to raise money.  The job called for a lot of travel – Pete wanted less travel and got into consulting as a fund raiser.  Expect Meed Ward to toss out some ideas at the Thursday Council meeting.

The city has not appointed anyone to the Disaster Relief Committee but there are names being floated around.  “We want people who have some experience with this kind of thing” said Scott Stewart Acting City Manager.

While it is never fast enough, organizations are coming together and help is being delivered.

The Red Cross has taken on the task of organizing the volunteers.  The Firefighters have set up a schedule showing time slots that are available for fireman to work at a home that needs help.

There are senior people at city hall who remark that the Region has been missing in action on this file; much the way there were totally uninvolved with the land fill dumping that was going on at the air park.

Flood - Palmer Drive - piled at curb

We are going to see a lot of this for the next couple of weeks. Hopefully the Disaster Relief Fund, once it is created will be able to get funds into the hands of people who need it – now.

The Mayor, whose home reportedly had eight feet of water in the basement, came close to “losing it” several times during the media event.

This experience has been hard on just about everyone.  Time now to pull together and clean up the mess.  We will be living with some of this come Christmas.

 

 

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