victims" or something else like on them, isn't always a wisest thing.
Did you know that if you donate to a place, writing that on your check, they can not use those funds to help anyone effected by something other than the hurricane? Now that may not seem like a bad thing, but not everyone who needs help is going to be in need due to that hurricane. Even in a hurricane damaged area.
If someone comes in for help because they had a house fire, your funds can not help them. Yours may actually be the only funds there, or yours and others designated for hurricane victims, but they still can't be helped because your funds are for hurricane victims only. So be careful what you write or designate your donations for. It may well leave someone in need, still needing.
I hope this helps shed some light on the plight of those here in south west Florida and gets those here some much deserved, and over due, help. In what ever form it may come. It is time that we actually got the attention we deserve, and not ignored because some other area seemed like it would get more attention, higher ratings and more air time, even when it wasn't as damaged.
I am going to try and get my family the help we need from organizations again, but I have to say their track records are not looking so good in my eyes. FEMA included. So many people, sadly, go to them and lie. This makes it so that what little funds they had to help people with wind up disappearing before those who actually need it get it. I have seen this more than a few times as well.
I saw a woman in a store last year, who I had just seen get help from one organization (which shall remain nameless) buying herself a big wide screen television with the funds she got from this organization. Now she had just been telling them she needed it for her and her family, giving them this long story about how she needed it not a few hours before (I happened to be there as emotional support for another person who was also seeking assistance at the time, note they didn't get it and they actually needed it). And here she was buying herself a new wide screen television. How right is this?
Then there is a former neighbor our ours who lied to FEMA last year and told them the damage to her home was from a particular storm that had just passed. It wasn't. Her home was damaged by her, her children, and some other not so nice people the went in and out of it regularly. But did they check out her story? No. She got quite a lot of money from them actually. Within a few weeks of her applying and lying to them, you saw her driving around in all these different cars with dealer info on them. Her kids had all kinds of new clothes and gadgets. They were spending like they won the lottery. Did they fix the house? No.
Shortly after seeing all this, a very nice person I know, who said she could not in good conscious sit back and watch them do what they did, reported them to FEMA for fraud. I can't say if anything was ever done, but as far as I know the family still lives in that same messed up home, in that same neighborhood. So you tell me if you think anything was done about it?
And, Yet again, at that same time there were tons of people that couldn't get help when they needed it.
I hope this helps shine a light on the way some areas, even when they are in dire need, are ignored, on purpose, by the media. How so many go without and have a hard time because no one thinks to help them. Since they aren't mentioned on the news, there are no big places pushing for you to help them plastered all over the net, they don't get noticed and they don't get help. Please think twice before helping the big advertised causes, or listening to what the media (the news included) telling you that someplace is the one that got hit the worst or the most. It usually isn't the truth.
Consider helping those who actually are in need, instead of those that are advertised.
Thank you for taking the time to read my article.
I hope it opens some eyes, and gets all the people who are hurt, like my own family, and are not advertised all over the news and the net, some help when they are in need.
Want to really help families in need? I would suggest that you donate to local south west Florida organizations that help south west Florida residents, rather than to the large groups that actually forget us and go elsewhere.
* Please note that when I say have an effect, I mean that they traveled in an area near enough to this part of Florida to have an impact on the area. Take Hurricane Mitch for example. It didn't hit the south west coast of Florida directly. It did, however, come close enough to cause enough wind, rain and water damage to the area to be added here.
** If you would like to check the information I have listed here, I would suggest you visit http://www.wunderground.com/tropical/. There you can find information on storms from 1886 to 2005.
About the Author
Thank you for reading my article.
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ASerenePath@aol.com (no spam, solicitations or junk mail. Thanks)
A little bit about me... I am a happily divorced mother of two intelligent, strange, unique and beautiful daughters. A resident of the South West Florida coast. The owner (or staff if you ask them) of two fun loving cats. And a Practitioner of Random Acts of Kindness.