Flood Victim's Recovery is Ongoing

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Flood victims’ recovery ongoing Tuesday, September 25, 2018

LIHUE – It’s been months since historic flooding wreaked havoc on Kauai, but the impact of the floodwaters is still being felt by those living in the hardest hit communities on the island. For those in need, there’s still help available. Rocio Maldanado and Nicholas Wright, disaster case managers from Catholic Charities USA out of Charleston, South Carolina, spent two weeks island assessing the needs of victims from the North Shore to the South Shore. The most important thing the world needs to know is that recovery is still going on, Maldanado said. “A lot of people think of a disaster is what happens immediately after, but months later, years later, a lot of these people are still trying to recover. A lot of them don’t get helped right away,” she said. During their time here, they helped about 70 applicants apply for assistance, but just because they are no longer on Kauai, doesn’t mean it’s too late for residents to get help from the charity. Currently, the biggest need the two have seen from applicants is housing, she said. “Whether they’re working to rebuild their own house or to repair it, or whether they’re looking into moving into a brand new place all together; that’s the main thing,” Maldanado said. Aside from housing is the need for vehicles. Many residents lost their vehicles during the flood, which also resulted in the loss of employment. “Especially the ones that live up in the North Shore, Wainiha, Haena — a lot of people lost employment especially because of the conflict with the convoy. That and the fact that they just lost all the vehicles to their flood,” she said. Over half of the applicants lost their cars and currently have no reliable transportation, Maldanado said. “They lost equipment. A lot of people were self-employed or worked off their land, were farmers. The flood just wiped everything out and what they would use as an income,” she said. Aside from losing homes, vehicles and other items, Wright said many in the community are dealing with other residual effects of the flood like Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. “Just fatigue, mental fatigue because you know if you lost you’re home, you’re homeless, trying to figure out couch hopping and a lot of people don’t want to go back to the land that they’re living on before because every time it rains they get flashbacks of what happened originally when the floods occurred,” Wright said. He continued: “We want to let them know that we see them. We see them for who they are and where they are and we accept them.”


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Flood Victim's Recovery is Ongoing by Hawaii Community Foundation - Issuu