FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Oct 06, 2009

Washington, DC - A team of AmeriCorps National Civilian Community Corps (NCCC) members arrived in Atlanta, Georgia, to provide emergency assistance to area flood victims and help rebuild the flood-stricken city. The team members will spend the next three weeks removing debris, and cleaning and sanitizing damaged buildings to prevent mold.

“Americans have learned that they can count on NCCC when disaster strikes,” said Nicola Goren, Acting CEO of the Corporation for National and Community Service, which oversees AmeriCorps. “From the terrorist attacks of 9/11 to Hurricane Katrina and the recent tsunami that devastated American Samoa, NCCC teams have responded to every disaster of the last 15 years. They oversee emergency shelters, organize donations of food, clothing and other materials, and lead teams of volunteers to help individuals and communities rebuild.”

The NCCC members are serving with Nechama, a Jewish disaster response organization based in Minneapolis-St. Paul, and the organization's national disaster response team. Nechama has a long history of working shoulder-to-shoulder with urban and rural communities to help restore affected areas and provide emergency services to those displaced after a natural disaster.

Georgia officials estimated more than $250 million in damages were suffered across the state as a result of the September 22 floods – from the mountain region to the northern suburbs of Atlanta. The NCCC team will be housed in Decatur and plan to lead a team of volunteers to help mitigate the flood damage throughout the greater Atlanta region.

A team of twenty-one NCCC team leaders were recently deployed to tsunami-devastated Territory of American Samoa to assist the American Red Cross with efforts to provide food and shelter for those affected.