Church helps its southern neighbor.It's been some time since we've reported about Good Samaritans helping the victims of Hurricane Katrina Far away from the Gulf Coast, in Jefferson, Oregon Jefferson is a city in Marion County, Oregon, United States. The population was 2,487 at the 2000 census. It is home to the annual Mint Harvest Festival and is the self-proclaimed "Mint Capital of Oregon" as well as "Frog Jumping Capital of the World". , the congregation at Jefferson Baptist Church decided to pitch in and help their neighbors down south. Among the church members is Tracy Roe, the owner of Trinity Custom Homes. Roe owns a piece of equipment called a Takeuchi TB 145 excavator ex·ca·va·tor n. An instrument, such as a sharp spoon or curette, used in scraping out pathological tissue. excavator (eks´k , which sounds like just the thing a hurricane-ravaged community could use to help rebuild a debris-strewn community. He hauled his excavator down to Gulfport, and a team of 16 volunteers from the Jefferson church went along, including Gordon Hilton, the owner of Hilton Trenching; Scott Weddle, of Weddle Construction; Larry Payne, a retired architectural consultant; and others with home repair skills. Roe told the Salem, Oregon Salem (IPA: [ˈseɪ ləm̩]) is the capital of the U.S. state of Oregon, and the county seat of Marion County. The district of West Salem lies in Polk County. , Statesman Journal The Statesman Journal is the major daily newspaper published in Salem, Oregon, United States. It serves Salem, Keizer, and much of the Mid-Willamette Valley. It was formed in 1980 by the merger of the two main Salem newspapers, the Oregon Statesman and the that "these people need help" The volunteer team's leader, Richard Pearson, explained to reporters how the church attracted so many skilled volunteers: "We just kind of put the word out there, and the people who came together were really wonderful." The focal point focal point n. See focus. of the neighbor-to-neighbor effort was the Jefferson group's adopted sister congregation, Robinson Road Baptist Church in Gulfport. The church itself received 20 to 30 thousand dollars' worth of damage from the hurricane, but Pastor Rocky Everett said that repairing church members' homes would receive top priority. "We'll have that excavator busy," Pastor Everett told the Statesman Journal. Pastor Everett told reporters that, in addition to the Oregon group, other Baptist churches around the country were also helping them. "If it weren't for these churches sending volunteers to help, we'd be much more desperate than we are," the clergyman told the Salem paper. |
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