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Below are some of the more recent postings from our Chapter Blog. For all postings, click here.
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Thank you for visiting the News Room section of our website.
Here you’ll find a sampling of the stories that have featured programs and services of the St. Louis Area Chapter. Check back often as we add stories daily and build an archive. Stories featured currently are from 2008. Use the year navigation to list items by that year and then click on the headline for a link to the featured story.
For more information please contact our Communication Supervisor at (314) 406-1920.
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3/30/2007 -
JCRC Rallies Support for Captured Soldiers
The JCRC has met locally to advocate for the missing soldiers. In March, Terry Bloomberg, president of JCRC, Batya Abramson-Goldstein, executive director of the JCRC, and Jeffrey Stiffman, JCRC's Israel Advocacy Chair and rabbi emeritus of Shaare Emeth, met with officials from the American Red Cross at the St. Louis headquarters in Creve Coeur. As Bloomberg started out the meeting, she stressed the importance of prompt action by individuals and humanitarian organizations and thanked the Red Cross for their work so far. The Red Cross officials told the JCRC contingent that they were supporting International Red Cross officials who have been working to help the situation, and have been particularly working with the Arab counterpart to the Red Cross, the Red Crescent, to begin dialogue with Hamas and Hezbollah on behalf of the soldiers. "We want you to know that we are doing everything we can to advocate for these soldiers," said Joseph White, CEO of the American Red Cross St. Louis Area Chapter. Rabbi Stiffman presented Joseph Pereles, a member of the Board of Governors for the national American Red Cross organization, with reproductions of the captured Israeli soldiers' dog-tags, as a reminder of their plight. |
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3/26/2007 -
Families Escape Burning East St. Louis Home
Carmen Mosley said she knows she is blessed that she, her four children, her upstairs tenants and their nine children made it out alive when they awoke to find their home engulfed in flames. Through tears, Mosley said she lost everything in the fire, as well as the house she has called home since she was 7 years old. She and her four children, ages 14, 11 and 9-year-old twins, now are homeless. So are Mosley's tenants and their nine children, who range in age from 6 to 15 years old. The American Red Cross sent a disaster action team to the site of the fire. Its caseworkers are assisting the families with shelter, food, clothing and the first month's rent when the families relocate. |
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3/21/2007 -
Project Drives Companies to New Offices, Technology
The American Red Cross is always focused on emergency response, so it's accustomed to planning for huge events such as the Highway 40 project. Nancy Bates, the St. Louis Area Chapter's executive officer of emergency services, said that in response to the construction, the local Red Cross will add a disaster action team closer to the city than its current headquarters in Creve Coeur. The team will be based at the Red Cross' Missouri-Illinois Blood Services Region building at 4050 Lindell Blvd. |
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3/7/2007 -
Measles Vaccine is Cheap and Life Saving
Each year, measles, a disease that has virtually been eliminated in the Western Hemisphere, kills nearly 345,000 people globally. Of those, most are children younger than five. Measles is a leading vaccine-preventable childhood killer, and millions of children remain at risk. The good news is that measles can be prevented with a simple vaccination that costs less than one dollar per child, and the American Red Cross is actively involved in grassroots fundraising and education to enable a widespread vaccination campaign. On Feb. 9, Kathy Lass, director of international services for the St. Louis Area Chapter, joined Omar Ruiz of the Jefferson County Service Center to discuss the Measles Initiative and other Red Cross international services during a live interview on KJFF Radio (1400-AM). |
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3/6/2007 -
Red Cross Presents Fairview Heights Man with a Lifesaving Award
The American National Red Cross honored a Fairview Heights man Monday by presenting him with a lifesaving award signed by President George W. Bush. Jim Cusic, a YMCA employee, Red Cross volunteer and former military paramedic, received the Lifesaving Award of Merit from the American National Red Cross. It was presented to him by the St. Louis Area Chapter of the Red Cross. The award recognizes Cusic for using CPR and an automated external defibrillator, or AED, to rescue East Belleville YMCA visitor Jim Corsi, who had collapsed after a workout in February 2006. |
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2/6/2007 -
Support Helps Red Cross Serve Area
The American Red Cross is a private, not-for-profit organization chartered by Congress to provide national relief during times of crisis. The Red Cross is here to serve the metropolitan area, and the St. Louis Area Chapter depends on community support for the necessary resources to prepare for and respond to emergencies. During a recent live interview on KJFF Radio (1400 AM), Omar Ruiz of the Jefferson County Service Center and Corie Wirth of the St. Louis Area Chapter emphasized three unique opportunities for the public to personally invest in the Red Cross mission: the Clara Barton Society, corporate partnerships and Operation CARS. |
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1/30/2007 -
Honoring Local Heroism: Residents Awarded for Acts of Valor
Nearly a year ago, an Edwardsville teenager was a passenger in a car that veered off the road and struck a utility pole. The force of the crash splintered the pole, dropped live power lines onto the vehicle, and she received a near fatal jolt of electricity when she tried to step out of the car to safety. When a team of local firefighters and paramedics responded to the car crash, the girl was unconscious and not breathing. But the emergency responders were able to save her life thanks to the rounds of CPR previously administered by two bystanders - neighborhood doctor Keith Byler and Stuart Marshall, who was also a passenger in the automobile. On January 22, the St. Louis Area Chapter of the American Red Cross recognized 12 local residents as Lifesaver Award recipients. Edwardsville Fire Department Capts. James Anderson, Brett Milton, Robert Morgan and Mark Parker were also among those who received this honor. |
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1/30/2007 -
Red Cross Salutes Rescuers
Ten months after the accident that almost cost her life, a 16-year-old girl got the chance this week to thank the people who saved her. An Edwardsville High School student, shocked by downed power lines after a car crash in March, thanked six men at an awards ceremony in Creve Coeur. The American Red Cross Lifesaver Award was presented to Dr. Keith Byler, an off-duty emergency room physician; Stuart Marshall, 17, another passenger in the car; and Edwardsville firefighters James Anderson, Brett Milton, Robert Morgan and Mark Parker. The Lifesaver Award is designed to inspire others to get trained in first aid and CPR. |
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1/17/2007 -
Shelter and Advice: Agency Shelters, Feeds Thousands During Storm - Offers Winter Weather Tips
The American Red Cross operated five emergency shelters in St. Louis City, St. Louis County, Jefferson County, St. Francois County and Belleville, Ill. following the winter storm on Nov. 30 that resulted in widespread power outages. Omar Ruiz of the Jefferson County Service Center discussed the Red Cross response to the storm while offering preparedness tips for winter weather during a Dec. 8 interview on KJFF Radio (1400 AM). |
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1/4/2007 -
Red Cross Offers Shelter from the Storm
After the wicked winter storm of Nov. 30, thousands of area residents were without electrical power for days. But, help was at hand in northeast Jefferson County from the American Red Cross St. Louis Area Chapter, which set up a shelter for those in need at the Arnold Recreation Center, 1695 Missouri State Road. Those without power could come to the recreation center to warm up and enjoy meals provided by the Red Cross. Overall, the chapter sheltered 823 people and served 5,241 meals and snacks during three nights at five shelters in the metropolitan area. |
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12/19/2006 -
A Civil Car War
With two weeks left in 2006, local charities are seeing a noticeable increase in vehicle donations as area residents scramble to meet a Dec. 31 tax deadline. By signing over a used car, truck or even a boat to a nonprofit before Jan. 1, donors can take tax deductions on their next tax returns. Like many donation programs, the American Red Cross St. Louis Area Chapter pays Bridgeton-based St. Louis Auto Auction a flat fee of $65 per vehicle to sell donated cars. The Red Cross receives any money above that flat fee, occasionally up to several thousand dollars. "We will take as many as come our way," said Mary Segneri with the Red Cross' development office. "If it has a motor in it and a title, we can sell it." During the charity's 2006 fiscal year, it received 76 vehicles, realizing $34,000 for the charity. |
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12/19/2006 -
Red Cross Outreaches to Blacks
Joseph White, CEO of the American Red Cross St. Louis Area Chapter, saw that it was time to increase the level of diversity within the Red Cross volunteer base during the organization's response in St. Louis following the Hurricane Katrina disaster. "We have a diverse board of directors and (office) employees, but not volunteers. We were missing the faith-based, African-American community. We were missing many possible caregivers and volunteers." White and the board started an aggressive outreach program for the organization to increase minority participation within its 1,575-member volunteer base. For help, he asked Yvonne Berry, a 27-year Red Cross executive, to focus on the outreach program. Berry took the challenge on with glee and has helped bring hundreds of black volunteers and many organizations into service with the local Red Cross. |
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12/11/2006 -
Thank You, Jefferson County
During a KJFF radio interview on Nov. 10, Omar Ruiz of the American Red Cross Jefferson County Service Center thanked listeners for their support of Red Cross programs and services during the pervious year. Ruiz expressed appreciation for the generosity of Red Cross volunteers, financial contributors and blood donors who help the Red Cross reach the community through diverse programs and services. "Because the Red Cross is not a government agency, public support of its mission to help the community prevent, prepare for and respond to disaster and emergencies is essential," Ruiz said. Last year, the St. Louis Area Chapter touched the community more than 410,000 times, while the Missouri-Illinois Blood Services Region collected approximately 300,000 units of blood to support as many as 120 hospitals. |
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12/11/2006 -
Man Has Been Teaching Water Safety for 50 Years
For the last 50 years, Jim May, 73, has shared his love and knowledge of the water through the American Red Cross, teaching swimming basics, water safety and lifeguard classes. For much of that time he's worked with the Boy Scouts of America. He figures he's taught water safety to some 17,000 Boy Scouts. Joyce Bathke is one of May's former students. A self-taught swimmer, she took a lifesaving class in the early 1980s with her son, then a Scout. Bathke was later hired by the Red Cross, where she now serves as director of health and safety. She's in charge of all of the Red Cross' swimming classes, as well as other health programs. She also travels the country and sometimes overseas to train other instructors on new lifesaving curriculum and conducts undercover inspections of water parks. |
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11/28/2006 -
Letter to the Editor: Red Cross Gives Thanks
During this Thanksgiving season, we say thanks to the community for continued, generous support of American Red Cross programs and services. Thanks to you, the Red Cross is making a positive impact in helping people prevent, prepare for and respond to emergencies and disasters. Thanks to you, Red Cross workers touch the community more than 410,000 times each year, training people in lifesaving first aid and CPR, emergency preparedness, water safety and more. |
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