Listen To WPR online Live Streaming Page Archive Streaming Page Click here to support WPR! Return to the WPR Home Page
Explore WPR
WPR Home
Support WPR!
Support WPR's Online Community!
Contact Us
About WPR
Newsletters and Reports
Studios, Stations and Program Schedules
Station Coverage Maps, Reception and Technical Issues
WPR Program Index
The Ideas Network
The NPR News and Classical Network
WPR News
Internet Webcasting
WPR's National SHows
The Radio Store
Related Links

WPR Programs
Search wpr.org
This Month's Featured Stories
NEWS LINKS: WPR News Home | Bureaus | Reporters | Awards
FEATURES: Specials, Series & Documentaries | Wisconsin Vote | Wisconsin Life | StoryCorps
GROUP SET UP FOR LONG-TERM FLOOD RECOVERY IN DULUTH-SUPERIOR"
WPR News - Group Set Up For Long-Term flood Recovery In Duluth-Superior"
Wednesday December 26, 2012 by Mike Simonson
Enlarge

Six months ago, the Duluth-Superior area was hit with a once-in-a-century flood, causing more than $25 million in damage to Douglas County alone. But even though the outward damage is repaired, a few hundred people are still trying to repair their homes.  

Most people have moved on, but Patricia Nelson and Father Leon Flaherty know there are 300 flood-damaged homes in Douglas County. Many of those families still need help with things like furnaces and hot water heaters, "A lot of people's freezers were in the basement or in family rooms downstairs. If it was a split-level, all the furniture, the beds are basically gone," says Flaherty. "A lot of washers and driers, a lot of utility room stuff,” says Nelson.

Nelson and Flaherty are part of the Douglas County Long-Term Recovery Committee. That’s made up of non-profit groups that include shelters, food shelves, senior citizens agencies and religious service organizations. Its mission is to help people who have exhausted all other avenues for help, a group that they say is largely invisible unless they come forward.

Nelson says there’s an urgency to get people ready for winter, "A lot of people who had stuff stored in their basements lost their winter outerwear," says Nelson. "So initially we were buying boots and jackets for kids." Flaherty says "That's where thing like St. Vincent DePaul come in because they have a lot of that already on hand so we send people there rather than to Target or K-Mart or something like that.”

In all, the June 20 flood damaged 1,900 homes in the Duluth-Superior area, destroying 72. Long-term recovery teams are also working in Minnesota.   Nelson and Flaherty expect all of these committees will be meeting for another two years before they’ve completed their mission.

 

You can also listen to this story or download it now! (1:30)



Support for WPR provided by

Shop Now!



Support WPR!


HOME | ABOUT | PROGRAM INDEX | MEMBERSHIP | SPONSORSHIPS | WPR NEWS
IDEAS NETWORK | NEWS & CLASSICAL NETWORK | RADIO STORE
LIVE STREAMS | AUDIO ARCHIVES

For questions or comments about our programming, call Audience Services
at 1-800-747-7444, email us at listener@wpr.org, or use our Online Feedback Form.
View our Privacy Policy.   Send comments about our website to webmaster@wpr.org.

©2013 by Wisconsin Public Radio - a service of the
Wisconsin Educational Communications Board
and University of Wisconsin - Extension.