From News Nation/AP:
“Groups turn to hotels to
shelter Oregon fire evacuees amid virus”
Fearing one disaster will feed
another, relief groups are putting some people who fled their homes during West
Coast wildfires into hotels to reduce the spread of the coronavirus, stringing
up shower curtains to separate people in group shelters and delivering box
lunches instead of setting up buffets. Large disaster response organizations
like the American Red Cross are still operating some traditional shelters in
gyms and churches, where they require masks, clean and disinfect often and try
to keep evacuees at least 6 feet (2 meters) apart. The groups say they can
reduce the risk of COVID-19 in a shelter but can’t keep people safe if they
don’t evacuate from the flames. “The last thing we want to have happen is
people to remain in the path of a wildfire or hurricane because they think it’s
safer to do that than risk a shelter,” said Brad Kieserman, vice president of
disaster operations and logistics for the American Red Cross. Kathy Gee, 68,
has diabetes and other conditions that make her vulnerable to the virus, but
that didn’t keep her from fleeing her farm in Molalla, Oregon, where wildfires
made the hillside grow red, for a shelter in Portland. “If it’s going to
happen, it’s going to happen. I’m tough,” she said of COVID-19. “I’ve survived
lots of things. I can survive that.” It can be difficult, however, for people
already reeling from a disaster to consistently follow rules on the virus. At
the Oregon State Fairgrounds in the capital of Salem, groups of maskless
evacuees gathered in a parking lot and a barn Friday, talking about the
unprecedented wildfires that have destroyed an area bigger than Rhode Island.
Volunteers wearing disposable masks walked from group to group, taking down
their information and asking what they need for the days ahead. Signs plastered
the doors of the exposition center, where cots were set up, with safety
guidelines for both wildfires and the pandemic. Inside, nearly everyone wore
masks after volunteers manning the door reminded them to do so.
The fires in California, Oregon
and Washington state have killed several people and sent 6,300 to emergency Red
Cross shelters and hotels. As many as 50,000 more could need shelters before
the blazes are under control, Kieserman said. Normally, they’d be gathering in
school gymnasiums and meeting halls, sleeping on cots and eating at buffet
lines provided by the Red Cross, Salvation Army and other faith and community
groups. But because COVID-19 is easily spread in close quarters, gathering
places are potential hotbeds of transmission. That’s got disaster assistance
groups taking a different approach. The Red Cross screens evacuees and those
who are sick or have symptoms are sent to special isolation shelters and kept
away from one another. When possible, displaced residents are sent to hotels
instead of group shelters. Instead of buffet lines, box lunches are delivered. “We’re
not using a gym, we’re renting a hotel room at 120 dollars a night. And hotels
charge for parking — it’s all those things you never think about during a
disaster,” Kieserman said. In central California, where thousands of residents
had to flee the Creek Fire, more than 1,200 evacuees are staying at 30 hotels,
said Tony Briggs with the Red Cross in Fresno. In group shelters, staffers are
using plastic pipes strung with clear shower curtains to separate evacuees but
allow them to see out from their own socially distanced areas.
Mass evacuations of this scale
are incredibly difficult, said Karl Kim, executive director of the National
Disaster Preparedness Training Center, which trains first responders. Generally,
he said evacuees either leave early and quickly or aren’t as mobile and require
some help getting out. The latter group may be people with health challenges,
are elderly or have animals may also have lots of disincentives to want to
evacuate. They might decide to wait it out longer and also are more likely to
need shelters, said Kim, who’s also director of the Disaster Management and
Humanitarian Assistance Program at the University of Hawaii. Some of them could
be at greater risk of COVID-19 complications. In Oregon, group shelters are set
up at churches, colleges and community buildings, while malls, golf courses and
other businesses opened parking for evacuees who can stay in recreational
vehicles. It will likely be weeks before officials know if the evacuations
contributed to the virus spreading, and even then, it may be difficult to tell
as families scatter to new locations. “Contact tracing is really critical
during a pandemic, and just because there’s a wildfire, all of the needs
associated with contact tracing don’t just go away,” Kim said. “I think it’s
more complicated because of the urgent nature of the evacuation. We don’t have
good systems for this; nonetheless, we need to do that tracking. That’s the
ongoing public health challenge.” Some lessons may be learned from Louisiana
and Texas. Both had high rates of COVID-19 when hurricanes hit in late August. Louisiana
used its “Megashelter,” a facility spanning more than 200,000 square feet
(18,580 square meters) that’s designed to hold nearly 4,000 evacuees, for those
with special medical needs during Hurricane Laura. Others got help finding
hotel rooms and vouchers to cover the cost. Louisiana health officials are now
offering evacuees mobile COVID-19 testing.
^ Dealing with Hurricanes,
Wildfires, other disasters on top of Covid-19 can not be easy. ^
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