Aid is in the pipeline
Barbara Diamond
Help continues to pour in for families whose homes were damaged or
destroyed by the June 1 landslide in Bluebird Canyon.
Laguna Relief and Resource Coalition spokeswoman Marsha Bode
announced that the center still had $75,000 in donations after $500
checks were distributed Monday to 22 red-tagged families -- those
expected to be out of their homes for at least a year -- and a couple
of yellow-tagged families, determined by the estimated time for them
to reoccupy their homes.
The coalition has distributed about $25,000 so far, mostly in
small checks given to families of red- and yellow-tagged homes, said
Debi Cortez, administrator.
“We’re waiting until we get a significant amount of money to
distribute large checks,” Cortez said.
The coalition’s adopt-a-family campaign ran into a snag when it
was learned that contributions earmarked for a specific family would
not be tax deductible.
Cortez says that seven corporations are now raising money in the
campaign to give $150,000 to each of 12 families that lost everything
in the landslide. Those who wish to donate to a specific family --
whose profiles are posted on the Internet -- will have to funnel
their donation through the City of Laguna Beach, which will handle
the disbursement.
“If we accept donations for a specific family, we could lose our
nonprofit tax status,” Cortez said. “But everyone should know that
the funds are being distributed fairly and equitably according to
families’ needs.”
Regular distributions will be made to everyone, Bode said. Special
requests will be evaluated by the five-member coalition finance
committee, which meets on Wednesdays, according to Bode.
Dispersal of funds “will go faster now that we have a good list
and things have begun to settle down,” Bode said.
She urged the families to take advantage of the six free
counseling sessions offered by Psych Support, a volunteer group of
local mental health professionals.
Two fundraisers are scheduled for this weekend, which Cortez hopes
will raise $150,000.
Family friendly activities will be held from noon to 3 p.m.,
Saturday at El Morro Elementary School, with more adult entertainment
from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.,
The Ken Garcia Band and Common Sense will perform. There will be a
food court
“Corporate sponsors have already ponied up about $60,000 in-kind
or cash contributions,” said fundraiser organizer David Vanderveen,
who owns a tagged home on Flamingo Road.
Tickets are $25 for adults, $10 for students. For more
information, call (949) 637-7759.
The Laguna Board of Realtors is sponsoring a fundraiser from 4 to
6 p.m. Sunday at the Sandpiper Lounge, 1183 South Coat Highway. The
Blues Offenders will perform. Tickets are $50.
Hobie Sports on Forest Avenue continues to sell “And Bluebird
Canyon Shall Rise” T-shirts for $20 each, proceeds donated to the
relief fund.
On July 2 the stores in the Lumberyard Mall on Forest Avenue plan
to kick off the holiday weekend by donating a percentage of their
sales to the Laguna Beach Landslide Fund.
Others offered in-kind services.
Contractor Charlie Williams is a hero to many of the displaced
families.
He and volunteers from his work crew graded a road to provide
access to the collapsed section of Flamingo Road and helped retrieve
vehicles and personal belongings from the homes.
Others have come forward with ideas for free or low-cost services.
The city’s landslide recovery coordinator, Bob Burnham, who
recently retired as Newport Beach city attorney, is in contact with
the Public Law Center, which provides legal services to the poor and
underprivileged but has certain restrictions on its services.
Laguna Beach City Atty. Philip Kohn, the center’s immediate past
president and a board member for 10 years, is looking into what help
can be provided to the displaced families.
Local attorney Gary Waldron offered his services and said other
attorneys in the city are also making themselves available pro bono
to families that need advice about taxes or how to deal with mortgage
lenders.
The families were truly touched Monday when El Morro students
Allison Palmer, 11, Kate McMahon, 11 and Myriah Reynolds, 10,
presented a $1,000 check for the relief fund on behalf of the student
body and the PTA.
“I said it’s been a tough week watching people pull their
belongings out of their homes, but things like that make me feel we
are going to be OK,” Bluebird Canyon Steering Committee Chairman
Steve Huberty said. Monday.
Cindy Frazier contributed.
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