White House photo by Eric Draper
President George W. Bush greeted disaster relief workers at Martin County Red Cross headquarters in Stuart and thanked Southern Baptists for their ongoing efforts to assist in relief during the active hurricane season in Florida. To Bush’s far left in her disaster garb of a yellow hat and T-shirt is Missouri Baptist Disaster Relief worker Patricia Krueger. Leon Hurley, pastor of Lena Vista Baptist Church in Auburndale and leader of Florida Baptists’ Lake Yale feeding unit, met privately with Bush, while other Missouri Baptists and New Mexico Baptists were asked to join others in greeting Bush at the Red Cross headquarters.
Editor’s note: This story contains new information and replaces the Sept. 30 story with the same headline previously posted to our Web site.
LAKE WALES (FBW)-Thanking Southern Baptists along with other
faith-based groups such as the Salvation Army, President George W.
Bush on the eve of the first-ever presidential debate in Miami,
visited hurricane stricken Florida for the fifth time in six
weeks Sept. 29-30, eyeing damage to a citrus farm in Lake Wales
hit by three of four hurricanes since Aug. 13, before visiting
with Southern Baptist disaster relief workers in Stuart.
"Despite week after week of strain, faith-based groups,
like Southern Baptists and the Salvation Army, are setting up
kitchens to feed the hungry," Bush acknowledged in Lake
Wales Sept. 29, while also bringing attention to the Red Cross
and the National Guard for operating shelters, distributing
supplies and keeping the streets safe.
Bush also mentioned the Southern Baptist Convention's relief
efforts at a Sept. 30 appearance at the Martin County Red Cross
headquarters in Stuart, battered by both hurricanes Frances and
Jeanne.
According to Florida Baptist Convention Disaster Relief leader
Fritz Wilson, before his remarks Bush met privately with Leon
Hurley, pastor of Lena Vista Baptist Church in Auburndale and
leader of Florida Baptists' Lake Yale feeding unit.
Bush noted volunteers "like these behind me" - which
included Hurley and South Baptist Disaster Relief workers from
Missouri and New Mexico - "have worked long hours to help
those affected by the storms," according to a transcript
released by The White House.
The president added, "The Salvation Army, the Southern
Baptist Convention, the Convoy of Hope from Springfield,
Missouri, and other faith-based groups have set up kitchens and
helped feed the hungry."
Photo by Joni B. Hannigan
Patricia Krueger (left) and Ron Hahs, Missouri Baptist Disaster Relief workers were selected to visit with President George W. Bush when he traveled to Stuart, Fla. Sept. 30. Krueger said the president hugged and thanked her for the efforts Southern Baptists have made after four hurricanes slammed the state within a six-week period. Krueger and Hahs lead the kitchen and feeding unit from Missouri which was scheduled to begin serving meals Oct. 1 at First Baptist Church in Stuart.
The volunteers from Missouri had been asked to bring their
truck to the Red Cross site and to mingle with about 40 other
guests to await the president's arrival with his brother,
Florida's Gov. Jeb Bush, according to Ron Hahs, from Daisy, Mo.-the
"blue hat" who stood near Hurley when the president
faced the press outside of the Red Cross building.
Hahs and another Missouri volunteer, Patricia Krueger, said
they were joined by Ronnie Seabaugh, also from Daisy.
"The president grabbed her and he hugged her," Hahs
said of Krueger. "Everyone recognizes the yellow hats."
The Missouri Baptists had just finished setting up their
feeding operation at First Baptist Church, Stuart, when asked to
meet the president, Hahs told Florida Baptist Witness in
Stuart Sept. 30.
"It was a delight and an honor, but he's just like the
rest of us-just higher up-but he made a real good impression,"
Hahs said.
Krueger said she was impressed when the president told the
workers he was there to engender financial support for their
ongoing efforts.
"He was very gracious," Krueger said.
Hahs said Bush was "not in a hurry" when visiting
with the workers, and that he freely expressed his faith.
"He seemed like a very sincere person," Hahs said.
"I think he would have been here if it was election year or
not."
In the wake of Hurricanes Charley, Frances, and Ivan, nearly 6,000
Southern Baptist disaster relief volunteers have helped prepare
more than 1.6 million meals and completed nearly 5,000 cleanup
and recovery projects, according to the Southern Baptist
Convention's North American Mission Board. On Sept. 27 about 600
volunteers from 10 states were already in various stages of
deployment to Florida's east coast and mobile kitchen units were
en route from Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, Texas, Missouri,
Oklahoma, and Tennessee. Closer to the area, Florida Baptist
Disaster Relief feeding and recovery units and local church
volunteers were already in place and serving meals almost
immediately following Jeanne.
Photo by Joni B. Hannigan
North of Stuart, Fla. where Hurricane Jeanne followed a path similar to the one left by Hurricane Frances a few weeks earlier, the sand dunes were almost entirely washed away by the pounding surf which continued inland to flood rivers, creeks and lakes—presenting an ongoing problem for Floridians. Many of the high rises along the beach were either destroyed or heavily damaged all along the coast, and the power had not yet been restored Oct. 1 to the stoplights all along coastal Hwy. A1A.
"Across the state, people are showing great compassion
and helping their neighbors make it through these storms,"
Bush said at the Lake Wales event. "And I thank them for
their care and their decency."
Surveying a 400-acre Central Florida farm owned by Marty and
Pat McKenna, Bush strode through an area where an unusual
layering of oranges was scattered beneath the trees-the bottom
layer was blackened and decaying, left after Hurricane Charley;
the middle layer, yellow, partially ripened fruit, left by
Frances; and the top layer, green fruit, shed from the newly
laden trees after Jeanne roared through the area Sept. 26,
according to a pool reporter.
"Our nation is praying for the victims of these storms,"
Bush said when he was finished with his tour. "We pray for
all who come to their aid."
Noting loss of life, severe flooding, power outages and
damaged farms, homes, hospitals and roads, Bush said: "These
have been trying weeks for Americans across the Southeast,
especially in this state."
Photo by Joni B. Hannigan
At Canova Beach Park in Brevard County and all up and down the eastern seaboard in Florida, many of the beach access points have been damaged by the sand erosion that occurred where Hurricane Jeanne followed a path similar to the one left by Hurricane Frances a few weeks earlier. In some places the sand dunes were almost entirely washed away by the pounding surf which continued inland to flood rivers, creeks and lakes—presenting an ongoing problem for Floridians. Many of the high rises along the beach were either destroyed or heavily damaged all along the coast, and Oct. 1 the power had not yet been restored to the stoplights all along coastal Hwy. A1A.
He also lauded the people of Florida for meeting the "historic
challenges with extraordinary strength and generosity,"
noting it's the first time since the 1880's that four hurricanes
have hit the same state in a single season.
Bush told reporters he's asked Congress to provide $12.2
billion to respond to Hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan and
Jeanne-and asked local official to make sure the resources reach
"the people who need it." He also pledged support to
make sure that citrus remains a strong part of Florida's economy.
Bush made the stop the day before he was schedule to debate
Democratic presidential rival John Kerry in Miami.
[With additional reporting by James A. Smith Sr.]