camwyn: (Megaloceros skull)
[personal profile] camwyn
Have called Red Cross and told them I can leave as early as tomorrow. They will call me back to let me know if they still need me.

Somehow I think they will. Maybe not tonight/tomorrow after all, but... soon.

.... lord, it ain't good when the signal cuts in and out while the reporter is trying to hold down her hat and report on the hurricane in Mississippi. C'mon, lady, just throw that mike down and yell "I QUIT" already.


ETA: Spoke w/someone at Red Cross chapter. He said it looked like in all likelihood I would be deployed tomorrow, and asked what disaster function I wanted deployment as. I told him DCO (disaster computer operations) for preference, but that I would do Mass Care/ERV driving if necessary.

Red Cross has a bunch of different functions within disaster services, see. Most of what you see on the news is generally either mass care, family services, or damage assessment, with the occasional Disaster Welfare Inquiry stuff going on. What you don't see are the other functions- Communications, Logistics, Disaster Accounting, Administration, etc. Every one of these jobs deploys infrastructure to make sure that the work is done as efficiently as possible and that we keep track of who's doing what and how the money's being spent and distributed. That's where I come in. Nearly all the disaster records are kept on computers at job headquarters, backed up nightly, and transferred to National Headquarters each day. Someone's got to keep the machines running so that we can keep track of what's going on. I'm a DCO- disaster computer operation- person. Generally this means I get sent to somewhere that a disaster operation is about to happen, and find that there are metric assloads of machines waiting to be set up and tracked. So that means three days of setting up and running around like mad, and then the rest of the job is spent in maintenance work and in helping out all of the other functions.

It's not as exciting as other jobs- last year in Florida I drove an Emergency Response Vehicle for some time, before I got transferred to shelter operations- but it needs doing. And there are far, far fewer geeks volunteering for Red Cross duty than there are people who can hand out food, conduct disaster impact interviews, or fill out forms. So, am volunteer geek.

Date: 2005-08-29 04:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] maps-or-guitars.livejournal.com
Wow, good for you. Proud to know you - that's good people stuff you're doing.

Date: 2005-08-29 04:44 pm (UTC)
sdelmonte: (Default)
From: [personal profile] sdelmonte
I have always found the "we're live in the eye of the storm" school of reporting fascinating. Why is this necessary? And why does anyone do that?

And yet...

Boy, it's COOL!

Date: 2005-08-29 05:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] paradisacorbasi.livejournal.com
Powers watch over you while you're out there doing good.

Date: 2005-08-29 06:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dormouse-in-tea.livejournal.com
Amen to this! If you are washed out to sea, I shall be Very Cross.

Pls make and carry a card in your wallet at all times. Something basic like "I think your name is very lovely" will likely do.

Date: 2005-08-29 09:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] just-the-ash.livejournal.com
You are the salt of the goddamn earth, and I will be saying mantras for your safety the whole time.
(deleted comment)

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camwyn: Me in a bomber jacket and jeans standing next to a green two-man North Andover Flight Academy helicopter. (Default)
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