By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Simple computers with Internet access are easing
part of the emotional burden of evacuees desperate to
reconnect with family. When
Hurricane Katrina hit the state with its high winds and
devastating water, much of the communication infrastructure
in the lower one-third of the state was lost in a few hours.
Hundreds of lives were also lost in that brief
span. Those
who got out immediately wanted to find out who and what
survived. Web sites such as http://www.gulfcoastnews.com
became the only source of information for many people. Those
without homes or electricity, however, couldn't access these
sites. Donna
Cliett, Clay County director with the Mississippi State
University Extension Service, saw a new way to help
survivors in addition to volunteering at the local shelter
and doing what she could to meet the physical needs of
evacuees. "We
had talked at the office about how we could use our
public-access computer to help those in our local Red Cross
shelter and had posted a notice about it in the shelter,"
Cliett said. "Then we heard about the Gulf Coast News Web
site, and that really kick started us. Almost immediately,
we were able to help a family find someone they were looking
for." Cliett
estimated that in a week and a half her office helped about
50 families find someone. Not only are the Extension Service
employees helping, Cliett even recruited her
family. "My
daughter helped reunite one family, and they told her she
was a God-sent angel," Cliett said. She
said many of the people they are locating are coming to the
shelter to take their family members home to live with them.
Cliett knows of people staying in the West Point shelter who
have gone to live in Florida, New York and West
Virginia. Cliett
told the story of one couple who got separated on the Coast.
He had just returned home from triple bypass surgery, and in
the panic of the storm, had stitches come loose. He was
taken to a hospital, and she ended up in West Point. Not
only were Cliett and her staff able to reunite the couple,
they contacted an out-of-state son who came to take the
family to his home. Virgil
Culver, interim assistant director of county programs for
the Extension Service, said Extension personnel throughout
the state are just trying to do their part to help the storm
victims recover. "Where
our offices are functional, we are making those public
access computers available. Many of our agents are using
personal resources to help others," Culver said. The
Extension Service has an office in each of the state's 82
counties, and in each office is an Internet-enabled,
public-access computer supplied to meet a variety of
educational purposes. Evacuees across the state can come to
the local Extension office and use the computer or submit
their information to an Extension staffer for someone else
to look up. "The
computers have been there about a year," said Geoff Guyton,
Extension computer systems analyst. "We put a computer in
every office to make it easier for the public to access our
website, http://www.msucares.com, and to use other online
Mississippi State University resources." As
hurricane recovery efforts continue statewide, many people
are turning to these public access computers to get
information on loved ones, disaster services and more.
Extension offices stayed open over the Labor Day holiday,
and many are keeping offices open beyond normal business
hours for the convenience of those displaced by the
storm. The MSU Extension Service offers a wealth of recovery-related information
online at http://msucares.com/disaster/. -30- Released:
Sept. 9, 2005
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
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Extension
computers help reunite families
Contact: Donna Cliett, (662) 494-5371
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:10
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fcenews/fce05/050909.html
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