Back from the eye of the storm
Marisa O’Neil
While he worked as a Red Cross volunteer for two weeks in
hurricane-ravaged Florida, Costa Mesa resident Spencer Sausser saw
first hand the highs and lows the storm victims experienced.
Sausser, a volunteer firefighter and member of the Costa Mesa
Citizen Corps, returned last week from his two-week trip, spent in
shelters, doling out food and helping with general recovery efforts.
There, he saw the devastation wreaked by the series of storms that
hit the state and left homes cut in two by fallen trees, roofs blown
off, clothes and furniture soaked and thousands homeless.
It was an educational, happy, sad, interesting and eye-opening
experience, he said.
“One thing I learned is: Don’t tell them it’s OK and that you
understand what they’re going through,” he said, “because I don’t.”
While in Florida, he worked in a 50-person shelter in Orlando and
traveled an hour-and-a-half south to Okeechobee, where the damage was
even worse.
“A typical scene would be a bunch of houses, but you couldn’t see
the windows because they were all covered with boards, if they were
still standing,” he said. “Sometimes you’d just see a washing machine
just sitting there with no roof and no walls on the house.”
One of the saddest scenes he saw was a woman who came to the
shelter in tears because she was too embarrassed to ask for help,
Sausser said.
Most of the people in the shelters, some of whom had been there
for weeks, were trying to make the most of their situations. Many
read books, watched movies and got to know each other.
“I loved seeing the smiles on people’s faces and trying to take
their minds off of the situation,” he said. “I was playing with the
kids and trying to take their minds off the fact that they weren’t at
home.”
The high point of his visit, he said, was getting to see a group
of senior citizens hear the news that they could return to their
homes.
“They were like little kids,” he said. “They all had big smiles on
their faces. They were so happy and relieved.”
After he returned last week, Sausser was once again called into
action. He was activated by the Orange County Fire Authority to help
stem local flooding during Wednesday’s rain.
Sausser’s boss, attorney Daniel Callahan, said he doesn’t mind
giving Sausser, his legal assistant, time off to help others.
“Some people are made up that way,” Callahan said. “Spencer is
made up that way, and we respect that. He’s cut out of the correct
fabric.”
The experience he gained has made Sausser into a tried-and-true
volunteer, said Cheryl Wills, fire prevention specialist for the
Costa Mesa Fire Department.
“He said his biggest goal was to help people and he did,” she
said. “He told me: ‘A lot of people could’ve done this,’” she said.
“I said: ‘A lot of people could have, but you did it.’ We’re proud of
him for representing Costa Mesa.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.