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Each year, the American Red Cross
responds immediately to more than 70,000 disasters, including house or apartment
fires (the majority of disaster responses), hurricanes, floods, earthquakes,
tornadoes, hazardous materials spills, transportation accidents, explosions, and
other natural and man-made disasters.
The Good
News Is That We Can Help Although the American Red Cross is not a
government agency, its authority to provide disaster relief was formalized when,
in 1905, the Red Cross was chartered by Congress to "carry on a system of
national and international relief in time of peace and apply the same in
mitigating the sufferings caused by pestilence, famine, fire, floods, and other
great national calamities, and to devise and carry on measures for preventing
the same." The Charter is not only a grant of power, but also an imposition of
duties and obligations to the nation, to disaster victims, and to the people who
generously support its work with their donations.
Red Cross disaster relief focuses on
meeting people's immediate emergency disaster-caused needs. When a disaster
threatens or strikes, the Red Cross provides shelter, food, and health and
mental health services to address basic human needs. In addition to these
services, the core of Red Cross disaster relief is the assistance given to
individuals and families affected by disaster to enable them to resume their
normal daily activities independently.
The Red Cross also feeds emergency
workers, handles inquiries from concerned family members outside the disaster
area, provides blood and blood products to disaster victims, and helps those
affected by disaster to access other available resources.
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