Marylanders Join Hundreds in Hawaii Wildfire Relief Efforts as American Red Cross Calls for All-Hands-on-Deck Response
Marylanders are among hundreds of volunteers on the mainland who are headed to Hawaii to assist with relief efforts after wildfires.
American Red Cross officials told 11 News it's an all-hands-on-deck situation, but they're not estimating yet how long they’ll be on the ground for in Maui and across the islands, saying they'll be there as long as they're needed.
Marylanders are among hundreds of volunteers on the mainland who are headed to Hawaii to assist with relief efforts after
wildfires. (Two Hawaii Army National Guard CH-47 Chinook perform aerial water bucket drops on the Island of Maui to assist the fight of wildfires, Maui, Hawaii, August 09, 2023. The two air crews performed 58 total bucket drops in 5 hours in up country Maui totaling over one hundred thousand gallons dropped on the fires. (U.S. National Guard Video by Air Force Master Sgt. Andrew Jackson))
Marylanders are among hundreds of volunteers on the mainland who are headed to Hawaii to assist with relief efforts after wildfires.
American Red Cross officials told 11 News it's an all-hands-on-deck situation, but they're not estimating yet how long they’ll be on the ground for in Maui and across the islands, saying they'll be there as long as they're needed.
"Our sympathies go out to everyone in Hawaii who are affected by one of the deadliest U.S. wildfires in 100 years," said Stephanie Babyak, with the American Red Cross National Capital and Chesapeake Region.
The American Red Cross has volunteers on the ground in Maui, where wildfires left a trail of death, destruction and devastation, and more volunteers are on the way.
"Currently, we have 220 trained disaster responders on the scene, seven of whom are local disaster responders who are working as teams to provide food, shelter and emotional support to families in need," Babyak said.... Read More: