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Volunteer Voices

Rudy and Shirley Senarighi of Sturgeon Bay recently traveled to Joplin, Miss. to help with Red Cross Disaster Relief efforts after a tornado.

Just as Rudy and Shirley Senarighi of Sturgeon Bay sit down to enjoy dinner, the phone rings. Shirley gets up to answer it. The couple has been volunteering for the American Red Cross for several years and Rudy knows by the end of Shirley’s conversation that the American Red Cross needs their assistance.

As volunteers, the couple responds locally to help with area disasters, and they have also been on several national deployments assisting in a Disaster Mental Health capacity. Between them, the couple has over 60 years of professional experience as counselors, teachers and administrative supervisors. They also bring experience in school district disaster planning and the Door County Critical Incident Stress Management Program to their volunteer roles.

The assignments are varied, but the couple is always positioned in Disaster Mental Health roles, ensuring that the American Red Cross can attend to the immediate mental health needs as well as the immediate physical needs.

“When we first arrive on scene at a disaster, the magnitude of the devastation is difficult to comprehend; no amount of preparation or discussion beforehand can really describe it,” says Rudy. “However, once we’ve seen and toured a disaster site, we begin to get our heads around what the people may be experiencing.”

What was once unimaginable is now reality: homes destroyed, livelihoods lost, loved ones missing or gone. Workers from the American Red Cross know that people not only need supplies to keep up their physical well-being, such as food and water, but they also need emotional support.

The last deployment for Rudy and Shirley was to the hard hit area of Joplin, Missouri after a devastating F5 tornado ripped through the town on May 22, 2011 causing 116 deaths.

Rudy, a cancer survivor for 11 years, believes his experience with cancer helps him bring focus to the really important things in life as he interacts with disaster survivors.

Rudy performed outreach in the community, helped at aid stations in various neighborhoods hit by the tornado, as well as provided support at a client shelter. He checked on individuals as to their need for resources, plans for reintegrating into their community and triaged their mental health needs.

Shirley was the mental health lead for the Integrated Care Teams (ICT). She worked with the health lead to assemble and train 10 teams of four volunteers per team trained in client casework, health, mental health, and spiritual care. The ICT teams contacted and met with families of those who had died as a result of the tornado. These teams contacted well over one hundred families within the first two weeks of the operation.

“The most difficult part is leaving the disaster operation while seeing so much work yet to do and not being able to finish things started,” says Rudy.

The couple is proud to serve the American Red Cross both locally and nationally. It’s important, “being there to listen to the individual stories and then helping people sort through their options to begin to make steps forward,” says Rudy.

So when that phone call comes in the middle of a frigid, Wisconsin night or as the plates are just hitting the dinner table, “We look at one another briefly and then say, ‘Yes, we’ll go.’ We know others would be there if we needed help,” says Shirley.

To learn more about becoming a volunteer for the American Red Cross visit http://www.newredcross.org.

For volunteer opportunities at other nonprofit organizations in Door County, please visit http://www.VolunteerDoorCounty.com or contact the Volunteer Center at 920.746.7704.