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SEPTEMBER 2005

The Mayor Sends Help
Doing Our Part to Aid the Victims of Hurricane Katrina

By Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg

Four years ago, after 9/11, people across the country helped New York City get back on its feet. Some came here to work with us in the recovery effort; many, many more donated to relief organizations while staying in their home communities and going about their daily lives. All of their acts of support and generosity meant the world to us. Now, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina and the terrible devastation it has brought to the people of the Gulf Coast, it’s our turn to do our part. Once again, we all have different, but important, roles to play.

Today, City officials with rescue and recovery expertise are on the scene. 137 NYPD Officers are leading a convoy of 100 MTA buses to New Orleans to relocate residents. A 36-member “Urban Search and Rescue Team” made up of City firefighters, police officers, and men and women from our Office of Emergency Management, all specially trained in rescue operations, are in Biloxi, Mississippi, searching for trapped and stranded people. Also, three high-ranking chiefs from the FDNY who are skilled in disaster management are in New Orleans. A Disaster Assistance Response Team of active and retired City firefighters is also helping the American Red Cross distribute emergency supplies in that city. And we’ve made it clear that we’re ready to offer all the personnel or equipment that may be needed.

There’s also something that every New Yorker can do, too — and that’s to donate money to the organizations helping the hundreds of thousands of people on the Gulf Coast who have been forced to leave their homes. They’re our fellow Americans, and they’ve just been hit by one of the worst natural disasters our nation has ever experienced. Many have lost everything they have; they need our help. So I’ve requested that the city’s houses of worship take up special collections, and urged banks to make appeals for donations at their ATMs. I’m encouraging public, private, and parochial schools to organize student “penny drives” for hurricane relief. And I’ve asked that during the week of September 11th, every concert, sporting event, or other public or private gathering raise money for victims of Hurricane Katrina.

We’ve also taken steps to make it easier to donate to hurricane relief. We’ve made it possible for City employees to voluntarily and automatically deduct money from their paychecks for relief organizations. And all New Yorkers can find out who to send money to, and how, by calling the Citizen Service Hotline at 311. Or you can write a check to the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City, a not-for-profit corporation that raises money for City projects. Send donations to the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City at City Hall, New York, New York, 10007, and note on your check that it’s for “Hurricane Katrina relief.” We’ll make sure that it gets into the right hands.

We’re all in shock at the destruction Hurricane Katrina created. But I’d also like to ask you to remember that we can all make a difference. Four years ago, a tremendous outpouring of generosity and teamwork helped New York City come back from a devastating terrorist attack—and this time, we will do the same to help the people of the Gulf Coast recover from the terrible forces of nature.

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