Puente prepares for “Godzilla” El Niño storm season

Out on the South Coast, weather predictions of a “Godzilla” El Niño storm season are more than a little unsettling. Long-timers remember the last El Niño winter in 1998, and the disasters it wrought on the communities of Pescadero, La Honda and surrounding areas.


Residents still tell the stories from that year: the flooding that poured 17 inches of water into homes on Stage Road, in downtown Pescadero. How it knocked out a bridge in Butano Canyon, and how it turned Pescadero High School – the community’s only emergency shelter – into a water-bound island that was all but inaccessible. Emergency vehicles found the main road into Pescadero impassable. A major landslide on Highway 84, the mountain road that links Pescadero and La Honda, shut all traffic down for weeks while the county made repairs.

Flooding in Pescadero.
Flooding in Pescadero.
 
In other words, locals were on their own. And they know that hasn’t changed.


“In a major natural disaster, like an earthquake or a big storm that affects the entire Peninsula, we are going to be last people that anyone is worried about,” says Ben Ranz, Community Outreach Coordinator for Puente.


“Help could come, but we’re going to be last on the list. And if a tree falls down and blocks the road – they wouldn’t be able to get us supplies, even if they wanted to,” he adds.


The farther away they live from a city center, the more acutely Coastsiders are already aware of the need to be prepared for a serious emergency, according to emergency personnel. This translates into having at least three days’ worth of food supplies, the minimum they’ll need to shelter in place.

 

But Puente knows many locals will need much more help than that. So Puente is working with the county to anticipate the gaps in First Aid, shelter and communication that will ensue in a major El Niño event.

 

“We know that we will be the responders. People are going to come to us, call us to find out information and ask what they should be doing with their families,” says Rita Mancera, Deputy Executive Director of Puente.

 

The good news is that Puente, and the South Coast, are getting help from the best possible source: the San Mateo County Office of Emergency Services, or OES. Historically, the OES has focused on the most populous parts of the county, with occasional side-trips to offer workshops and trainings on the coast. The result was that some Coastsiders had the training and knowledge to handle a natural catastrophe, but they were poorly networked and loosely organized.

 

That changed in late 2013, when Nick Gottuso became the first-ever Coastside District Coordinator for San Mateo County OES. His is a full-time job overseeing rural stretches from Montara all the way down to the Santa Cruz County line, including Half Moon Bay. Gottuso has been extremely busy these past 18 months, teaming with Coastside/Cal Fire Battalion Chiefs Ari Delay and Dave Cosgrave, giving two-hour Emergency Prep presentations where he answers questions about the county’s ability to respond in an emergency and what residents can do to help themselves until real help arrives.

 

Gottuso and his Battalion Chief partners also offer CERT classes (Community Emergency Response Teams), which covers a lot more ground than CPR and basic First Aid. In a CERT class, for instance, adults learn search and rescue techniques like how to use cribbing to lift broken pieces of concrete off someone who may be trapped underneath.

 

Gottuso says the Coastside CERT classes have seen record attendance from locals who are eager for lifesaving tips. That’s a very good sign.

 

“The more people can take care of themselves, the more resources they can free up for someone who needs our help more than they do,” he says.

 

Gottuso, a former police captain, has created the Coastside Emergency Corps (CEC). The Corps encompasses 118 volunteers who have the best emergency response training, including those with professional medical skills, CERT trainees, ham radio operators, Red Cross shelter personnel, Large Animal Evacuation Group members, and people qualified to work in an OES central command setting. In an innovative program unknown elsewhere, Coastside Emergency Corps volunteers are covered as County employees for workers compensation if they are injured during training or a real activation.

 

Gottuso also decided to issue special holographic identification cards to Corps members, who have all been fingerprinted and have passed background checks. The cards list their skills and qualifications. They can show the cards to OES officials in an emergency and receive clearance.

 

Gottuso’s presence has made a big difference already, according to Ranz. Puente is now a part of the South Coast Emergency Group, a smaller subset that meets once a month to discuss emergency readiness in Pescadero and surrounding communities.

 

“Before Nick came, we were reliant on community people thinking and talking about disaster preparedness, but a lot of them moved away,” says Ranz. “This was a great step toward recognizing that we have special needs.”

 

Those needs were laid bare in the wake of the devastating earthquake and tsunami that killed tens of thousands in Japan in March 2011. California officials issued, and then cancelled, a tsunami evacuation notice for the Coastside when no tsunami materialized. But hundreds of locals evacuated anyway due to misinformation and the terrifying images broadcast on TV. The result: gridlock on Highway 92, which prevented the county from getting through with food supplies for Pescadero’s Red Cross emergency shelter. Puente bought food and Puente youth, many trained as CERT volunteers, stepped in because the Red Cross didn’t have bilingual staff members to translate. CERT-trained volunteers were not formally activated, and Puente staff had trouble reaching many residents by telephone.

 

Community Outreach Coordinator Ben Ranz, center, with members of the South Coast community.
Community Outreach Coordinator Ben Ranz, center,
with members of the South Coast community.

 

In brief, “it was panic,” says Mancera. “What we got out of the situation was that we were not ready.”

 

Puente is far more ready today than four years ago. After the tsunami scare, Puente obtained a grant from the Silicon Valley Community Foundation to train community members in CPR and First Aid. Every Puente youth and nearly every Puente adult staff member receives CPR and First Aid training and residents at nearby ranches, farms and businesses have also been trained. Three Puente employees are CERT trained and are also ham radio operators. Three of them are CEC members. Local school district staff has received similar training.

 

Disasters aren’t always forged by Mother Nature. Puente has a lot of practice reacting to local crises, like when a mushroom farm shut down, costing 300 jobs. Puente helped with rent payments for the newly unemployed. Or when a fire displaced nearly 30 farm workers and their families: Puente helped them find shelter.

 

As fall turns to winter, Puente is starting to work on a community phone tree that, once activated, will help get important information to farms and ranches far out of cell phone range. And the Silicon Valley Community Foundation has generously committed to reimburse Puente for up to $50,000 of disaster spending on behalf of the community. Puente’s longstanding partnership with the La Honda-Pescadero Unified School District increases community capacity to reach the region’s adults and children.

 

It doesn’t take a tsunami or a 100-year storm to bring Pescadero to cut off the community from the rest of the world. A rainfall on November 1 left big puddles of standing water by the roadside, a prelude of worse yet to come. Creek flooding is a long-term struggle in the community, much of which also lies below sea level. And when it floods, the water can take days to recede.

 

“People need to understand that we’re all really vulnerable here,” says Kerry Lobel, Puente’s Executive Director. “Thanks to a partnership with the Red Cross, Puente has emergency bags that items can augment with their own supplies. We really encourage people to have food and water and other disaster items ready, because there’s already only a limited number of items you can buy in town.”



For more information about disaster preparedness, contact Ben Ranz at Puente at branz@mypuente.org

Making a Difference in This Season of Giving

One of the best parts of working at Puente for Abby Mohaupt, Volunteer Coordinator and Faith Community Liaison, is making the list of what South Coast community members will receive at the end of the year.

Between ESL graduation, the last Zumba class of December, Posada, La Sala Christmas, Homework Club celebration, the annual Hannukah party at the Pescadero Elementary School, and gift card distribution for families, Puente collects and gives away over 4000 items to close to 500 individuals and families. Pencils, backpacks, sleeping bags, socks, crayons, hoodies, towels, dreidels, puppets, and more—all get sorted into stockings and bags and boxes.

“It can be a little overwhelming to make that list and then think about collecting everything, but it’s also amazing to know that each item will be donated,” says Mohaupt. “We’ll make 125 stockings for children to get from Santa at Posada—and those stockings are filled with toys and books, as well as handmade scarves and school supplies.” In the past, the stockings have been packed by volunteers. This year students from San Mateo’s Serra High School will do the packing.

Volunteers from 2012 with donations for La Sala.

Abby Mohaupt, left, with volunteers from 2012 with donations for La Sala.

For Kerry Lobel, Executive Director, the stockings have a personal meaning. “One year, my mom said, ‘why not give every child a Christmas stocking?’ so we do!” she says. The stockings are given to children by Santa at Posada.

It’s not just children who receive things during the holiday season. For many years, Puente gave away bags of much-needed items to farmworkers. This year will mark the second year that participants in La Sala will have the opportunity to fill their own bags and boxes with what they’ll need for the year.

“In the past, we’ve had volunteers pack bags of toiletries, sweatshirts, tshirts and other things that we think farmworkers need. Last year we set up the multipurpose room in the elementary school so that each participant could pick what they wanted instead of what we think they needed,” Mohaupt remarks. Those volunteers have been invaluable to Puente and to the end of the year collection and distribution.

Rethinking La Sala’s Christmas experience let the men choose exactly what they wanted and needed—so some of the men took 5 deodorants and some took 1, some took 3 sweatshirts and some took 5 tshirts instead. Sleeping bags donated by Harvey Milk Academy in San Francisco were a big hit.

“It was a joyful sight to see workers fill up their own Christmas bags,” Ben Ranz, Puente’s Community Outreach Coordinator recalls. “That room was full of smiles!  It was also educational for us – we learned that towels are a much hotter commodity than we realized, so we will be getting many more of those this year.”

Toiletries laid out for La Sala Christmas in 2014.

Toiletries laid out for La Sala Christmas in 2014.

This year also marks the second year that donations collection have been done through the online giving site, Roonga. The site lets donors buy specific items for Puente’s collection and at the end of the drive, all the donations arrive at Puente at the same time. This has cut down on donations taking up much-needed storage space and allows Mohaupt to easily track what Puente has and what still needs to be donated.

Even so, many committed and generous donors still want the experience of collecting real items. Members of Peninsula Metropolitan Community Church, just one of many faith communities who help with the end of the year drive, are collecting glue sticks, soap, shampoo, and hot wheels. Rev. Terri Echelbarger says that for her congregation, “the tangible part of ritually collecting supplies as a part of our worship directly connects our folks to Puente in an important way.” Members of the congregation will also volunteer at Puente’s December 18th Posada celebration.

Other donors prefer to put even more agency into the hands of participants. Since 2011 Puente has been giving gift cards to participants so that families could purchase the presents and food they wanted for the holidays. “Parents know exactly what their kids want and need, so we empower them to choose the way they celebrate,” says Lobel, “and buy what they want.”

Laura Rodriguez, Community Resource Navigator at Puente, is the person who calls families and registers them for gift cards. She says that “we want families to have a happy Christmas and by giving parents the tangible hope that they can provide for their families with these cards” we get to support the celebration.

One of the families who received gift cards in 2014.

One of the families who received gift cards in 2014.

One mother, who asked to remain anonymous, said, “With the gift cards that I receive for my children I purchase clothing for them since many times we do not have enough money. Thanks to Puente I am happy that I am able to give my children presents and make their Christmas special. The gift card that I receive for food, I buy food that is needed in my home.”

This year, Puente needs to raise $13,000 for those gifts cards to Mi Pueblo, Target, and Ross—which will be given to participants who sign up for them in increments of $50. Some of those cards will be donated by First Congregational Church of Palo Alto.

The rest of the $13,000 will be raised through Razoo on Giving Tuesday (December 1) and Puente staff are gearing up for a big day of fundraising. Donations can be scheduled ahead of time online or by contacting Patrick Letellier, Puente’s Development Director at pletellier@mypuente.org or by calling 650-262-4090.

Puente helps locals get covered and stay healthy

Ivan Ortega remembers the 6-month period he went without health insurance, and how it turned his world into a bad dream. The 19-year-old (who was in high school at the time) suddenly had to curtail his favorite activity: sports. He couldn’t afford an injury – or even an illness – because his parents couldn’t foot the hospital bill.

“It felt like forever. I couldn’t do anything. It felt like I had to be wrapped in a bubble so I wouldn’t get hurt,” he recalls.

As a youth, Ortega actually lost his health insurance coverage twice – once when his dad lost his job, and another time when the family missed a single month’s payment and he was disenrolled.

Now Ortega has health care through Kaiser Permanente, which he chose as a newly enrolled adult under Covered California. He pays $75 a month and can do as many sports as he likes. His coverage is not contingent on either of his parents. He stands on his own two feet, and it feels great.

“It’s good, because I feel I should be paying for this on my own – my health insurance, my car insurance. I want to be more independent,” says Ortega, who is a Program Assistant with Puente and also a college student.

Ivan Ortega helps Mairol at the Dia de los Ninos celebration in the spring.

Ivan Ortega helps Mairol at the Dia de los Ninos celebration in the spring.

Ortega’s story illustrates how satisfying – not to mention secure and responsible – it feels to invest in health insurance, for your own sake and that of your family. That’s the message Puente is sending this season during the open enrollment period for health care through Covered California, which began November 1 and lasts through January 31, 2016. During that time, Californians can renew their coverage, choose a new plan, or apply for subsidized coverage or a tax credit, based on their income.

Puente is gearing up for an outreach campaign directed at South Coast residents who may still not have coverage or aren’t happy with the plan they have. Puente’s new team of community health workers, also known as Promotoras de Salud, will go door-to-door with flyers and educate people about why they might qualify for Covered California.

If they do, Puente can help sign them up. And that’s only one option. Puente staff also process new applications for Medi-Cal. They help participants apply for (or renew) their coverage under ACE (Access for Everyone) and Healthy Kids, two subsidized programs that are available to undocumented residents of San Mateo County.

Puente’s overall health strategy includes a major push to get locals enrolled in some kind of health insurance program – which is key to getting people into the habit of seeing a doctor before a chronic illness, like diabetes, becomes a disability. A Puente community health survey in 2013 revealed that at least 19 percent of South Coast residents didn’t have health insurance. And that 40 percent of adults had not seen their primary care doctor in the past year.

Those numbers have greatly improved since then. In 2014, Puente enrolled or renewed health coverage for 141 local participants. That number has climbed to 205 participants so far this year, with two months left to go. Laura Rodriguez, Puente Community Resource Navigator, predicts that as many as 250 people will have health care by the end of December.

And best of all, people are actually using their health insurance to seek out a doctor – some for the first time in their lives.

“I’ve noticed that, for a lot of our participants who haven’t had a physical before, once they got Covered California, they went seeking medical services. They say, ‘We’re paying for it – might as well use it.’ And some of them have been consistently using it,” says Rodriguez.

Puente vastly expanded its health care education and field outreach programs in 2013, and they are coming to fruition under the leadership of Molly Wolfes, Puente’s first-ever Community Health Coordinator. She joined Puente via a generous grant  from Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford.

Puente now has a doctor in the house every Thursday evening, and that has made a huge difference as well. San Mateo County’s new Coastside Clinic in Pescadero has two exam rooms housed in a Puente portable. It has been booked up since it opened in March, as word gets around that there is a convenient way to see a doctor in the center of town. The clinic serves patients without private insurance. Both the clinic and the Promotoras are funded by San Mateo County Measure A grants.

“I have seen a lot of people come into the clinic who have never been to Puente before, and even some who have their first doctor’s visit in 20-40 years or ever,” says Wolfes. “After their first physical, they can access additional care and services such as going to an ophthalmologist, a nutritionist, or OB/GYN. The community is beginning to realize the services that are available once you have insurance and can take care of the health conditions they have gotten so use to living with.”

Molly Wolfes, left, and Laura Rodriguez, second from right, with Stanford fellow Martell Hesketh, and former Puente staff member Monica Amezcua, right

Wolfes believes that accessing health insurance has empowered Puente’s participants by helping them take control of their health through access to the tools they need to take care of themselves and their families.

But it’s not without some challenges. Rodriguez reports that several families who are enrolled in Kaiser through Covered California have not been receiving their invoices because their mail comes to their post office box — the only mail delivery for most of the rural South Coast. As a result, they have struggled to pay their monthly premiums on time and were disenrolled without their knowledge.

Puente has been helping manage their cases, but it’s been “frustrating,” says Rodriguez. “The agencies can’t talk with each other. We don’t have access to them and we can’t see what is going on in between.”

Some families have even said they would rather go without health insurance next year and pay the tax penalty than go through all that hassle. But Rodriguez thinks they may change their minds. Last year, the household tax penalty for forgoing health care under the Affordable Care Act was $285 per family. This year, it’s $695.

Ortega has also had trouble receiving his bills from Kaiser, and he still hasn’t received his membership card, even though he has been enrolled for 6 months. “It’s been really weird. They keep sending me back and forth,” he says.

Still, he has managed to see his doctor for a check-up. He figured out a way to pay his bills online before they come due. “It’s a lot better than not having insurance,” he says.

At Puente, we believe that people ultimately want what’s best for their families, and that means staying healthy for a long, long time.

“That’s the most important thing – being here for your family,” says Rodriguez. “You need to go the doctor and get your checkup. Because if there’s a chance for your family to have a better future, this is part of it.”

Support for Puente’s health and wellness coverage and prevention programs comes from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, San Mateo County: Health Coverage Unit, Healthcare for the Homeless/Farmworker Health Program and Measure A, Kaiser Permanente, Mills-Peninsula Health Services/Palo Alto Medical Foundation, Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford, and individual donations.