{"id":91542,"date":"2022-09-24T03:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-09-24T11:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/alaska-volunteers-aid-red-cross-response-to-california-wildfires\/"},"modified":"2022-09-24T11:25:52","modified_gmt":"2022-09-24T19:25:52","slug":"alaska-volunteers-aid-red-cross-response-to-california-wildfires","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/alaska-volunteers-aid-red-cross-response-to-california-wildfires\/","title":{"rendered":"Alaska volunteers aid Red Cross response to California wildfires"},"content":{"rendered":"
When Loren Jones departed the City and Borough of Juneau Assembly after nearly a decade, he said he planned to stay active in the community<\/a>. Volunteering with the Red Cross has him helping out in other communities, too.<\/p>\n Jones was recently one of eight Red Cross volunteers to be deployed early this month to Sacramento, California, to assist with several wildfires, specifically the McKinney Wildfire, burning across California. The eight volunteers were tasked with forming a sheltering team at the special request of Red Cross national headquarters.<\/p>\n “The Red Cross has always had a great reputation for serving in times of disaster,” Jones said. “When I thought of all of the areas and non-profits I could volunteer with and then spoke with Britta (Tonnessen), I decided that Red Cross fit my desires to be helpful within the city, state and region.”<\/p>\n Red Cross disaster program manager Britta Tonnessen said since Jones joined the Red Cross last fall, he has offered skills and time that have been valuable.<\/p>\n “Given his skills and time available, we paired him to a couple positions to start including Government Operations and Operations Management,” Tonnessen said. “He joined on as my disaster program manager of Southeast Volunteer Counterpart. Over 90% of our workforce is volunteer. Since Loren joined he has also become a Mass Care Sheltering Service Associate and Disaster Action Team Responder (he responded to the multi-unit fire in Juneau a few months ago providing immediate financial assistance and care). Loren holds office hours and supports Steady State (non-disaster operational) activities such as the Juneau LEPC, the Ironman aid station, community events, and exercises. We are so very grateful for Loren’s service.”<\/p>\n From all over the state to where help is needed <\/strong><\/p>\n The other Alaska volunteers came from Anchorage, Wasilla, Fairbanks, Two Rivers, Skagway and Ketchikan, with Jones being the only volunteer from Juneau. The volunteers left by Sept. 8 and upon arrival in Sacramento, Jones said they traveled as a team to help the various sheltering operations across the state.<\/p>\n According to Tonnessen, two other volunteers who deployed to the same disaster response from Southeast Alaska are Paulette Laberge out of Ketchikan and Ray Tsang of Skagway. Laberge is Red Cross’ primary disaster action team responder in Ketchikan, she has supported sheltering agreements in Ketchikan, and is a mass care sheltering manager. Tonnessen said Laberge left the wildfire in California last weekend and directly reoriented to the Typhoon Merbok Disaster Response in Alaska. Tsang has multiple disaster cycle service positions from mass care sheltering to logistics distribution of emergency supplies.<\/p>\n