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An Inside Look at One Church's Response
ORLANDO, FL (September 14, 2004) - Special Report to Covenant News Service
Pastor Kevin Brintnall was alarmed when he
heard the news that "Charley" had developed into a major hurricane and
was threatening the Florida peninsula.
Brintnall, who pastors Audubon Park Covenant Church, and his wife,
Karen, had left Orlando for a two-week vacation in Oregon that included
a wedding and family reunion. "When we left on August 10, Charley was a
named storm, but was moving westward in the southeast Caribbean. Like
many storms in the past 12 years in Florida, we had watched with
interest, but were not overly concerned."
Charley, growing in intensity, made a sudden right turn as it moved into
the Gulf of Mexico. Weather forecasters were caught off guard as Charley
turned sharply toward the Northeast to slam the category 4 hurricane
into the West Coast of Florida. Punta Gorda became a household name as
this low lying coastal community took the full brunt of the storm.
Tracking Northeast at 25-28 miles per hour, the storm's eye crossed
directly over Orlando before exiting the state near Daytona.
Brintnall recalls the helplessness of that Friday night, August 13, and
the early hours of the next morning. "I felt a mix of relief and guilt
that I was not there with the congregation to face this storm with
them," he recalls. Winds as high as 106 miles per hour were recorded at
the Executive Airport, just a mile away from the Audubon Park Covenant
Church of Orlando. For a harrowing 90 minutes the strongest winds of the
storm lashed the neighborhood, bringing down Laurel oaks and live oak
trees that had been planted when the neighborhood was built . . . after
Hurricane Donna plowed through the same area in 1960. "The amount of
tree damage was incredible. Huge oak trees, many three or four feet in
diameter, were twisted and broken by suspected tornadoes that were
embedded in the eye wall of the hurricane. Other trees fell due to the
straight winds. Power lines were down and virtually all of the Orlando
area lost power."
Brintnall need not have worried about his congregation, however. With
first light they sprang into action. Several gathered at the church
around 8:00 a.m. the morning of the 14th and began the task of clearing
the driveway and parking lot of fallen branches so that other vehicles
could gain entrance. A gas-powered generator was brought out of storage
to provide electricity for the anticipated need for ice and
refrigeration. Others began to check on neighbors and help others who
began to emerge from their homes to assess the damage. The church
quickly became the meeting place for those seeking help and those
offering it. Neighborhood block captains and CERT-trained neighbors also
came to the church to offer help.
"There is a strong history of neighborhood action coupled with the
church as the meeting place," explains Brintnall. "In the late 1990's
several courses were offered by the Orlando Fire Department to train
people to respond to emergencies. The Northridge earthquake taught fire
and police authorities that a wide-scale emergency quickly overwhelms
emergency services. People step up to help in emergencies but are
sometimes injured and even killed while trying to help. Community
Emergency Response Team (CERT) training was designed to help people know
how to respond and how to help one another. The church co-hosted the
training courses and even stored emergency equipment in a large storage
closet. Chain saws, power generators, first aid supplies, rescue gear,
lights, fans and radios are among the supplies stored at the church for
emergencies."
In addition to the CERT training, the church also co-hosts several
events each year that include the National Night Out of Neighborhood
Watch, quarterly block captain meetings and a Hurricane Awareness night
that is held close to June 1, the start of "hurricane season" in
Florida. In the past, emergency meetings have been called as storms
threatened the state. The last emergency meeting had been held just
prior to the approach of Hurricane Floyd in September of 1999. In that
case, Floyd turned north and missed Florida. Hurricane Charley's sudden
turn to the Northeast caught almost everyone off-guard, Brintnall notes.
"Residents had as few as four hours notice to get ready."
In the days that followed Charley, the church continued to serve as the
center of the neighborhood's recovery efforts. Leaders in the church
organized ice pickups from distribution points in the city and passed
along information from city leaders to the neighborhood. At one point,
the mayor of the city along with the local city commissioner visited the
church to see how the neighborhood was coping. Mayor Buddy Dyer
commented that "Audubon Park is the best organized neighborhood in the
city." Since most residences did not have their power restored until
seven or eight days after the storm, the church became a place of
refuge. Kathy Montoya, chair of the congregation, observed that "even
though we had no electricity, we still met that Sunday morning after the
storm and had a time of praise and sharing. Amazingly the power to the
church was restored Sunday evening. During the next several days people
came to the church to get a break from the heat and humidity since our
air conditioner in the fellowship hall worked great."
Later in the first week following the storm, the kitchen at the church
became a place where people could come by for a cup of coffee and the
latest news on the small television that someone brought to the church.
Barbara David, a council member of the congregation, cooked several hot
meals for families without power and Vivian Grew, a member of the
congregation, cooked several breakfasts during those difficult
post-storm days. On the first Thursday evening after the storm, enough
donations were gathered from thankful neighbors that the leaders of the
church decided to throw a party and invite the neighborhood. More than
70 people showed up for this impromptu cookout. "The role of the church
in the neighborhood during this time has created great good will and we
hope to see some of our neighbors join us on a Sunday morning real
soon," Montoya added.
Large piles of debris still litter the neighborhood and almost every
home still has a large pile of branches in the front yard. The church
sustained damage to its roof, but the extent of the damage will not be
known until a roofing contractor can be scheduled to examine the barrel
tile roof. "Contractors are in great demand around Orlando these days,"
explained Brintnall. "We hope to make repairs before the next hurricane
comes our way." Hurricane season officially ends November 30.
Copyright © 2008 The Evangelical Covenant Church. |

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