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ELCA NEWS SERVICE

February 27, 2007  

Louisiana Lutherans Voice Appreciation, Frustration Over Hurricane Response
07-027-JB

     KENNER, La. (ELCA) -- Pastors and lay members of
congregations of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
(ELCA) in southern Louisiana met here Feb. 22 with the ELCA
presiding bishop.  In a public forum, they shared a mixture of
joys and thanks, as well as concerns and frustrations about the
church's overall response to the devastation caused by Hurricane
Katrina nearly 18 months earlier.
     About 40 people met with the Rev. Mark S. Hanson, ELCA
presiding bishop, Chicago, at Christ the King Lutheran Church.
They repeatedly emphasized that the recovery work in southern
Louisiana -- particularly in the metropolitan New Orleans area --
is still ongoing and will likely continue for several years.
     Hanson said he visited the area to listen and learn from
pastors and others who have been dealing with the aftermath of
the widespread disaster for months, while working to rebuild
their ministries and congregations.
     Hanson began the day with a tour of the New Orleans area --
including the devastated and abandoned Ninth Ward -- and briefly
visited three congregation sites.  Grace Lutheran Church, New
Orleans, and Gethsemane Lutheran Church, Chalmette, La., suffered
major flood damage and are undergoing repair work.  Bethlehem
Lutheran Church, New Orleans, suffered minor damage.  All three
congregations of the ELCA have been involved in helping to
coordinate recovery work in their neighborhoods.
     Lutherans gave some $26 million in financial contributions
to relief and recovery work following the 2005 hurricane season.
Through 2006 Lutheran Disaster Response (LDR) expended nearly
$17 million for hardship grants, spiritual and emotional care,
volunteer coordination, and long-term recovery, rebuilding and
case management.  LDR recently announced it will spend
$8.3 million for similar work in 2007.  Much of its work is
administered through locally based Lutheran social ministry
organizations.
     LDR also received more than $7 million through "Katrina Aid
Today," a national case management consortium administered by the
Federal Emergency Management Agency and the United Methodist
Committee on Relief.
     LDR has reported nearly 20,000 volunteer "experiences" --
some people have volunteered more than once -- through 2006.
Volunteers from throughout the church traveled to this area to
muck out homes and businesses, and to rebuild damaged structures.
More than 800 college students will volunteer their time during
the spring break period to assist in various recovery projects in
Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas.

Pastors, members ask for changes in disaster response policies,
procedures
     In a public forum, Hanson acknowledged the "huge challenges"
the congregations in southern Louisiana have faced, and asked,
"How can the church nourish you as centers of mission?"
     "I hope you sense the phenomenal way that people continue to
pray for you," said the presiding bishop.  "In the midst of all
the devastation, you stand as faithful witnesses to God."
     Most of the ELCA pastors and members told Hanson of their
appreciation for the recovery efforts by volunteers from
throughout the wider church.  Many also voiced specific concerns
and frustrations about LDR policies, and in some cases, the
response of the overall ELCA churchwide organization to the
disaster.  They asked Hanson to:
+ facilitate changes in how disaster funds may be used. They
asked that LDR funds be made available directly to ELCA
congregations, and in particular, they wanted to be able to use
the funds to rebuild or repair church structures.  Hanson
responded: "We need to find a way for the donors' funds to go
directly to congregations."
+ facilitate better local communication.  Some pastors said they
wanted better communication systems among them and social
ministry organizations, synods, LDR and other groups in the ELCA
churchwide organization.  Others said they were frustrated by
local news reports that seldom mentioned the efforts of thousands
of Lutheran volunteers who have helped local families and
congregations to rebuild and recover.
+ facilitate improved contact with local ELCA leaders by staff of
the churchwide organization and social ministry organizations.
Some clergy and lay leaders said churchwide staff had not met
with them or asked for advice, expertise and assistance they
could offer to groups involved in disaster response.  In
response, Hanson said, "Congregations should be seen as resources
and not ignored."
+ facilitate improved staffing. Some pastors asked that
additional staff be put in place that could relieve them of the
burdens created by handling overwhelming offers for help and
coordinating disaster response from their congregation sites.
One person suggested that the ELCA maintain a pool of pastors to
serve in an area where a significant disaster has occurred.
     Others suggested that funds from the wider church be made
available directly to help support pastors, and there were
suggestions that LDR become a "first response" agency in disaster
situations.
     Hanson told the audience that before his visit here he met
with LDR staff in Chicago, and they discussed a need for a
"bigger table" to make possible a larger, more coordinated
response to disasters by the ELCA churchwide organization.  He
pledged to work on system changes and emphasized that his overall
goal is to strengthen LDR in its role as the church's primary
public "face" in response to significant domestic disasters.
     The presiding bishop said he will discuss concerns about LDR
and the church's overall response at the March 1-6 meeting of the
ELCA Conference of Bishops in Galveston, Texas.  A written
report, "Being the Church in a Post-Katrina World," from clergy
in the New Orleans and Baton Rouge, La., areas will be
distributed to the conference, and some of the clergy will meet
in person with the synod bishops, Hanson noted.
     Prior to the public forum, Hanson met privately with several
clergy to discuss their concerns and frustrations about the
church's response to the disaster, and to hear their suggestions
for change.

Pastors, lay members appreciated visit, said they were heard
     After the forum, the Rev. Patrick Keen, Bethlehem Lutheran
Church, said he was glad Hanson visited here to listen and to
encourage local leaders in "our ministry of recovery."   Keen
said he hopes the concerns expressed will be addressed, so
recovery won't take as long "because there will be a better
coordination of the efforts and resources that are available
through our church."
     "One of the key messages we wanted the bishop to hear is
that we are grateful to the people of God across the country that
have supported us in our journey of recovery (and) that it has
been the people of God that have been the source of hope and
inspiration in light of the 'failed' institutions -- both the
secular and sacred institutions," Keen said in an interview.
     "Every house, every home, every life that we've touched has
been a joy.  It's been a witness of God's grace," he said.
     Financial resources are a concern, Keen said, adding that
his own congregation's resources are minimal and a source of
congregational financial support from the synod is slated to end
in two months.  Immediately after Hanson's visit, Keen said the
congregation will house a volunteer work crew from Wartburg
College, Waverly, Iowa, one of 28 ELCA colleges and universities.
     The Rev. Barbara A. Simmers, Peace Lutheran Church, Slidell,
La., emphasized that the response to the disaster is far from
over.  "We need your prayers, we need your finances," she said in
an interview.  Peace Lutheran Church serves as a housing site for
disaster response volunteers working in areas north of Lake
Ponchartrain and in heavily damaged St. Bernard Parish.  About
2,000 volunteers have stayed at Peace since the storm, she said.
     This year skilled laborers or people who can learn to hang
and tape drywall are needed, Simmers said.  Some painting will be
done later, she said.
     Simmers said she has spoken at some synod assemblies about
ongoing recovery needs in south Louisiana.  She said she hopes
bishops will respond to requests to allow Louisiana pastors to
address synod assemblies this year "to keep the cause alive,
because it's not being kept alive in the media anymore," Simmers
said.
     The Rev. Ronald B. Unger, Christ the King Lutheran Church,
said it was important for Hanson to hear that the church has been
"the leading light" for recovery in southern Louisiana.  He
emphasized the need for the church to provide funds directly for
congregational support, and for rebuilding and repairing ELCA
church buildings.  Churches should be working at full capacity in
their own neighborhoods and not be preoccupied with their own
situations, Unger said in an interview.
     Unger expressed gratitude for the church at-large and the
"church-to-church" efforts by volunteers to help area
congregations recover.
     "We're dealing with the day-to-day grind, and the depression
of the people here," Unger said.  "And holding us up is the
gospel of hope in the middle of all that."
     Jim Wee, president of the flood-damaged Grace Lutheran
Church, expressed frustration during the forum that LDR funds
were restricted from being used to help ELCA congregations.
However, the congregation has received substantial financial and
volunteer help from the wider church to help it complete repairs
and renovations on its building, he said.
     "We want to move from a 'receiving congregation' to a
'giving congregation.'  We are incredibly thankful for what we
have received," Wee said.
---
     Audio of comments from the Rev. Patrick Keen is at
http://media.ELCA.org/audionews/070227A.mp3 
and of comments from the Rev. Barbara Simmers is at
http://media.ELCA.org/audionews/070227B.mp3 on the ELCA Web site.

     Information about Lutheran Disaster Response is at
http://www.ldr.org on the Web.

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or [log in to unmask]
http://www.elca.org/news
ELCA News Blog: http://www.elca.org/news/blog