| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 1, 2011 |
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Tornadoes strike the Federation Training Center and surrounding rural communities Tornado Relief Factsheet - April 30, 2011 EPES, ALABAMA.... The Federation will offer it's Training Center in Epes, Alabama to house volunteers and others assisting those who have been displaced from the tornadoes. Assistance to devastated communities will also include food, water, clothing, equipment, supplies, to Tuscaloosa and surrounding rural communities, impacted by the storms (we used our facility in a similar way during the early weeks after Katrina in August/September 2005). Financial assistance is critical to offer this much needed support. Please consider donating on the Federation's website at www.federation.coop to help with this much needed assistance. Below also find a fact sheet about the impact of these devastating tornadoes. The Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund (FSC/LAF or Federation) is a regional, non-profit, IRS 501c 3 organization that provides information, technical assistance, training, resources and advocacy to a membership of 20,000 low income families working in cooperatives, credit unions and other self-help community based associations across the rural South. Organized in 1967, we are in our 44th year of operation. A primary focus of the Federation is on Black farmers and landowners as well as other family farmers struggling to maintain their land, livelihood, culture and communities. The Federation utilizes the cooperative form of democratic economic organization to help people collectively address their problems and uplift their communities. The Federation’s membership owns and operates a Rural Training and Research Center on 850 acres of land, near Epes, Alabama in rural Sumter County. The Center is halfway between Meridian, Mississippi and Tuscaloosa, Alabama, five miles from the Epes-Gainesville Exit - No. 23 on Interstate 59/20. The center has a dormitory (that sleeps 72 in bunk beds - 4 to a room), a commercial kitchen, auditorium, classrooms, offices and a demonstration farm and timber program. The Federation has been active over the years in disasters facing our membership including: droughts, floods, hurricanes and now tornados. Most recently we have been active in developing relief and recovery programs among farmers and fishers in the rural and maritime communities across the Gulf Coast. Besides delivering emergency funds, food, clothes, fuel, animal feed and other supplies in the aftermath of Katrina, Rita and other storms the Federation has also developed and is working to implement cooperative development strategies for housing, seafood and community development in depressed and neglected communities across the Gulf Coast and rural South. We also see farmers, landowners, fishermen and other indigenous community leaders as the “first responders” to natural disasters and as community advocates to insure that smaller rural communities are not left behind in the rebuilding efforts of Federal, state and local officials. In response to these tornados, the Federation is committed to a strategy and plan of action outlined below: a. We are reactivating our Federation Rural Training and Research Center, near Epes, Alabama, as a staging and supply storage area for assistance, i.e., food, water, clothing, equipment, supplies, to Tuscaloosa and surrounding rural communities, impacted by the storms (we used our facility in a similar way during the early weeks after Katrina in August/September 2005). b. We are making our dormitory and kitchen available (we have 60+ bunk beds) for people coming from outside the area to work on relief and recovery efforts in Tuscaloosa and surrounding areas. The Center is located 50 miles south of Tuscaloosa and provides easy access to these areas, without imposing on people in the direct impact area. c. We will be concentrating our direct emergency assistance to families in small rural communities in the Alabama Black Belt counties surrounding Tuscaloosa:
d. At the Federation’s Rural Training Center, we sustained wind damage, including high-tunnel greenhouse collapsed ($7,000), shingle, siding and gutter damage to buildings ($2,000), food spoiled in cafeteria due to 3 days without electricity ($1,000) and cross fencing for goat demonstration herd destroyed by falling trees ($ 2,000); all of which will need to be repaired or replaced. e. Community training and advocacy for community residents and leaders in their rights and benefits under state and Federal programs like FEMA, SBA, USDA, and others, as well as Red Cross, United Way, and others. We found after Katrina that community leaders needed training and instruction in the details of program regulations and filling out paperwork to receive promised benefits from public and private agencies, as well as counteracting racial discrimination by agencies and programs involved in disaster relief. We plan to offer this type of training as soon as feasible and continuing over the rebuilding period. f. Utilizing cooperatives and credit unions in making the recovery efforts more inclusive, democratic, equitable and effective. Also learning from the disaster response experience to be more prepared and effective for the next disaster. The Federation needs the support and assistance of its members, partners and friends in making this tornado response meaningful, sensitive and successful. You may contact us and donate funds and other materials designated for disaster relief. through our website at www.federation.coop. The Federation’s Fiscal and Accounting Office is located at 2769 Church Street, East Point, GA 30344; phone 404/765-0991; Ralph Paige, Executive Director; Cornelius Blanding, Field Director; Ms. Jackie Ward, Executive Assistant. You can also directly contact the Federation Rural Training and Research Center, 575 Federation Road (P. O. Box 95) in Epes, Alabama 35460; or by calling 205/652-9676 or e-mail at fscepes@mindspring.com. Ask for - John Zippert, Director (cell 205/657-0273); Ms. Debra Eatman, Logistics Coordinator; Ms. Pam Madzima, Co-op Development Program; Osa Idehen, Outreach Coordinator. |
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| Note: The Federation/LAF, now in its 44th year, assists Black family farmers across the South with farm management, debt restructuring, alternative crop suggestions, marketing expertise and a whole range of services to ensure family farm survivability. |
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