Ike recovery underway; SBTC teams begin cleanup in E. Texas


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Hurricane Ike recovery is underway with Southern Baptists of Texas Convention volunteers clearing trees and debris in the piney woods of East Texas, but the physical damage to churches along the Gulf Coast was hard to assess early Monday with much of east coastal Texas without electricity and phone service.

More than 100 Southern Baptist disaster relief units from several states were serving along the Gulf Coast and farther inland, with SBTC volunteers feeding hurricane evacuees in Tyler, Livingston, Port Arthur and t1:place w:st=”on”>Huntsville, said SBTC DR Director Jim Richardson.

Ike’s wide and destructive swath was “catastrophic,” Richardson said, spreading its damage east of Galveston into Louisiana and north into deep East Texas along much of the same area that Hurricane Rita devastated in September 2005.

“We have clean-up and recovery teams in the field right now. We’re assessing damage in East Texas. We have all of our DR units out. Texas Baptist Men has all of theirs out,” place “on”Richardson said. “Our teams are feeding, doing clean-up and assessment, or providing for chaplaincy needs. The shelters are still very active. We have immediate need of volunteers for mud-out and chainsaw work.”

The Southern Baptist TEXAN’s attempts to reach churches along the t1:PlaceType w:st=”on”>Gulf Coast were mostly unsuccessful as many were without phone service on Monday.

Marcos Ramos, pastor of First Baptist Church, Galena Park, about 20 miles north of the coast between Houston and t1:place w:st=”on”>Galveston, said his home was without electricity but not the church, where 28 people slept on Friday night and early Saturday as Ike hit.

“We didn’t have services,” Ramos said. “Most of our people evacuated. We were at the parsonage, and we’re OK except no electricity.”

A home he is buying in LaPorte, which his mother lives in, sits only two blocks from the sea wall, yet it received no major damage or flooding. “We thank the Lord for that.”

“We’re barbecuing outside,” Ramos said. “We’re heating up coffee and cooking out there. Of course, we are using candles. We’re thinking about renting a generator. It’s going to get better but it might be a while for some people.”

Ramos said several cool nights in a row have made sleeping easier in the normally warm, humid coastal climate.

Billy Graff, pastor of University Baptist Church in place “on”>Galveston, said: “The best report I have to date is that the church has very minimal damage. The church is surrounded by tall buildings, which apparently provided protection.If we had power we could have services.The most challenging problem is that we are not allowed back on the island. This could be a great opportunity to connect with the community for Christ.”

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