{"id":263174,"date":"2007-08-16T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2007-08-16T07:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sdnews.com\/pt-loman-rises-to-task-to-help-katrinas-victims\/"},"modified":"2007-08-16T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2007-08-16T07:00:00","slug":"pt-loman-rises-to-task-to-help-katrinas-victims","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/test.sdnews.com\/es\/pt-loman-rises-to-task-to-help-katrinas-victims\/","title":{"rendered":"Pt. Loman rises to task to help Katrina&#8217;s victims"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Aug. 23 marks two years since Hurricane Katrina did a cakewalk through New Orleans&#8217; unstable levies and changed the Big Easy forever. A city where 450,000 people once lived is now home to 265,000. For whatever reason &#8220;&#8221; lack of money to rebuild, a better life elsewhere or utter disgust and defeat &#8220;&#8221; many people did not return. <br \/>In neighborhoods on higher ground, there are houses with signs in the yard that promise &#8220;We&#8217;ll Be Back!&#8221; next to empty houses with &#8220;For Sale&#8221; signs on the lawn. There are unsafe homes whose owners now live in the yard in tiny FEMA trailers. In low-lying neighborhoods, like the poorest areas of the Lower Ninth Ward and Jefferson Parish, homes are boarded up and possibly abandoned forever. <br \/>But hope and salvation remains for others, thanks in large part to helping hands coming from hundreds and thousands of miles away &#8221; including Point Loma. <br \/>Despite the despair and misery of the post-Katrina era, the homes of at least 5,460 Jehovah&#8217;s Witnesses have cleaned, repaired and rebuilt through the efforts of a network of volunteers who have accomplished what the government seemingly could not. <br \/>&#8220;Most people see Jehovah&#8217;s Witnesses as people who knock on doors,&#8221; said Point Loma resident Larry Svelmbe. &#8220;They don&#8217;t see the other aspects of what we do.&#8221; <br \/>Svelmbe, a cabinetmaker and Point Loma resident of 37 years, has traveled to New Orleans twice in the past two years at his own expense and time taken off work. <br \/>He was one of 17,000 Jehovah&#8217;s Witnesses worldwide who poured into the Louisiana area within days of the disaster. <br \/>&#8220;Many of the people were poor and black,&#8221; Svelmbe said. &#8220;The government failed those people. To see it brought me to tears.&#8221; <br \/>Svelmbe and his wife, Debbie, live in a modest home made elegant by his talent and craft. Rooms are filled with handmade and one-of-a-kind armoires, chairs, kitchen cabinets, desks, even his front door, all of which were crafted by him or rebuilt from recycled furniture. <br \/>Svelmbe traveled to New Orleans with his own tools and stayed two weeks each time in a Kingdom Hall converted to volunteer housing with rows of bunk beds. <br \/>The Witnesses worked in teams &#8221; covering every facet of the home rebuilding process &#8221; laboring to put houses back together. <br \/>&#8220;We received corporate donations from lumber to food, paint, carpet, doors, windows and cabinet tops,&#8221; Svelmbe said. <br \/>Of the 21 Kingdom Halls in New Orleans, three are operational today while the others are used for ongoing repair efforts. <br \/>&#8220;The first year we worked on homes with wind and water damage,&#8221; Svelmbe said. <br \/>And despite a jobsite roof fall in Ocean Beach that left two rods and eight titanium screws in his back, the 57-year-old Svelmbe returned this year to volunteer again. <br \/>&#8220;The second year we worked on homes that were initially underwater,&#8221; he said. <br \/>For homes that suffered water damage, dryers and dehumidifiers were set up to reduce the moisture level. Once dried out, a house was gutted, or &#8220;taken down to the studs.&#8221; <br \/>&#8220;The volunteers who went in for mold remediation were my heroes,&#8221; Svelmbe said. &#8220;Men and women went in the 90-degree heat in plastic suits with helmets. They blasted very inch of a home with ground-up corn cob. It&#8217;s the tool of choice because it takes off the mold but doesn&#8217;t destroy the wood.&#8221; <br \/>Once air samples from a home were sent to a lab and given a passing grade, the home was completely rebuilt &#8220;&#8221; drywall, air conditioning, heating and plumbing, at an estimated cost of $12,000 per home. <br \/>Homeowners were not charged, &#8220;but they could make a donation if they wanted,&#8221; Svelmbe said. <br \/>All homes received the same color of carpet, paint and cabinets. <br \/>Homeowners could choose from five solid cabinet surfaces and five doors and fixtures of chrome, brass or white. <br \/>With only 30 homes left to complete in the post-hurricane efforts, Svelmbe reflects on the main drive to rebuild: &#8220;We got them back into their houses so they can resume their spiritual activities.&#8221;<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Aug. 23 marks two years since Hurricane Katrina did a cakewalk through New Orleans&#8217; unstable levies and changed the Big Easy forever. A city where 450,000 people once lived is now home to 265,000. For whatever reason &#8220;&#8221; lack of money to rebuild, a better life elsewhere or utter disgust and defeat &#8220;&#8221; many people [&hellip;]<\/p>","protected":false},"author":726,"featured_media":263175,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_seopress_robots_primary_cat":"","_seopress_titles_title":"Pt. 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