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Research reveals unexpected heroes of natural disaster response: 'Every study ... has revealed'

Research reveals unexpected heroes of natural disaster response: 'Every study ... has revealed'

Yahoo06-04-2025
When it comes to disaster response, most of us think of first responders as firefighters, police, EMTs, soldiers, and medics. But the very first responders, in the truest sense of the word, are the people in the immediate vicinity when a disaster takes place — and studies show that they form a critical part of disaster relief.
Nice News explained the vital, yet often overlooked, role that these civilian responders play in the immediate wake of a disaster. They used the example of the Los Angeles fires in January, detailing how celebrities and everyday people went out of their way to assist their neighbors.
For example, several people helped clear the streets to allow ambulances through; others helped their elderly neighbors evacuate; others volunteered their trailers to evacuate horses or braved the blazes to rescue injured wildlife. Businesses opened their doors to allow displaced residents to shower and charge their phones.
Without this immediate, tangible assistance, it's almost guaranteed that many more people would have been injured or even killed.
And beyond the L.A. fires, Nice News explained, over 60 years' worth of research from the University of Delaware's Disaster Research Center has proved the importance — and the ubiquity — of local assistance during emergencies.
"Every study of a large-scale disaster conducted by the Disaster Research Center has revealed some level of emergent, informal helping behavior," they shared.
Research published in the journal Environment & Urbanization found that in crises when each minute matters, it is the people already on the scene — friends, family, and neighbors — who are most likely to save lives. From digging would-be victims out of debris to evacuating survivors from potentially dangerous zones, these people are the first line of defense even before the first responders.
Local volunteers also provide critical assistance in the weeks following any disaster, even if their contributions aren't officially logged and measured. Nice News referenced a range of disasters where volunteers contributed hundreds of thousands of hours of help, from the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing to the Kobe earthquake in Japan, the September 11 attacks in New York, the 1985 earthquake in Mexico City, and more.
And as the dust settles — literally — there is often a need for skilled volunteers, which is why Nice News encouraged anyone in the vicinity of a disaster to look for ways to contribute in the months and even years afterward. For example, as the city recovers from the L.A. wildfires, many residents will need help navigating insurance claims, correctly filling out FEMA paperwork, rebuilding temporary and new homes, looking for new jobs, and more.
If you don't live near a disaster but would like to help contribute to recovery efforts, donating money to reputable volunteer and disaster relief organizations is an excellent way to lend a hand.
What would you do if natural disasters were threatening your home?
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Pack a bag or pay up: Some plastic bag bans appear to be working
Pack a bag or pay up: Some plastic bag bans appear to be working

USA Today

time29-06-2025

  • USA Today

Pack a bag or pay up: Some plastic bag bans appear to be working

Plastic bag bans and fees have spread across the United States, and new research says they're doing a good job at cutting down on litter, although some rules work better than others. In places where they are in effect, plastic bag policies led to a 25% to 47% reduction in the amount of disposable, thin plastic bag litter as a proportion of the items collectioned during cleanups of America's shorelines, a study released in the journal Science in mid-June, found. In 2023, about one-in-three Americans lived in a place where some type of plastic bag regulation was in place. "Overall, we see a significant decrease in the percentage of plastic bags in coastal cleanup efforts," in areas with some type of plastic bag policy in place, said Kimberly Oremus, a professor of marine science and policy at the University of Delaware and one of the paper's co-authors. But the bans have a history of controversy too. 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‘It's a concrete eyesore': Locals and survivors rage over New Jersey's ‘unfinished' 9/11 memorial
‘It's a concrete eyesore': Locals and survivors rage over New Jersey's ‘unfinished' 9/11 memorial

Yahoo

time27-06-2025

  • Yahoo

‘It's a concrete eyesore': Locals and survivors rage over New Jersey's ‘unfinished' 9/11 memorial

Survivors of the September 11 terror attacks and locals have blasted New Jersey's 'unfinished' 9/11 memorial as a 'concrete eyesore.' Officials say the Empty Sky memorial is complete, but one of its designers and the families of those who perished say otherwise. The monument in Jersey City's Liberty State Park consists of two brushed stainless steel twin walls, 210 feet long, the width of each side of the World Trade Center Towers. The names of more than 740 people who lived in or had ties to the state are etched inside the reflective steel but the exterior concrete walls are still bare and have become stained over the years. 'It's a concrete eyesore. It looks horrible,' Jessica Jamroz, one of the memorial's designers, told 'It gives a sense of abandonment and forgottenness.' Locals are not only upset over the aesthetics of the concrete walls, but the names of 18 New Jerseyans are still reportedly missing from the memorial, their families said. And out of the 65 cherry trees that were planted to frame the memorial and bloom each September to symbolize rebirth, only five remain – and are in poor shape, according to the news outlet. 'It feels like the memorial's spirituality is under attack and no one really cares,' Jamroz added. Michael Danatos, whose brother-in-law Brian Martineau died in the 9/11 attacks, called it 'a disgrace.' 'We're bumping up against 25 years and this is the best we can do?' Danatos, who approved the original design of the monument, asked. One of the electronic kiosks for looking up names on the interior panels was not working last week, according to the outlet. 'The risk of leaving the memorial unfinished, and the site neglected, is that it could become over time instead an emblem of forgetting; of the decay of memory,' John J. Farmer Jr., who served as senior counsel to the 9/11 Commission and is the director of the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers University, added. New Jersey officials acknowledged that the memorial is in need of some restoration work, in a statement to but disputed the claim that the memorial is unfinished. 'Unable to secure additional funding for the project, the architect, project manager and the state determined that the memorial must be redesigned to fit the project budget so that New Jersey victims of 9/11 could be honored by the state,' officials said in response to the outlet. 'The architectural design team developed a new design that only included stainless-steel cladding on the interior walls.' Th Department of Environmental Protection manages the memorial and the Treasury funds the upkeep. The departments said the memorial 'is considered complete' in a joint statement. Officials added that the DEP 'is consistently working on longer-term projects to improve the condition of the memorial's trees, lighting, and to modernize the kiosks that assist in locating names on the memorial.' Danatos disagrees. 'It is an irrefutable fact the memorial remains incomplete, even though it was opened to the public in 2011,' she said.

‘It's a concrete eyesore': Locals and survivors rage over New Jersey's ‘unfinished' 9/11 memorial
‘It's a concrete eyesore': Locals and survivors rage over New Jersey's ‘unfinished' 9/11 memorial

Yahoo

time27-06-2025

  • Yahoo

‘It's a concrete eyesore': Locals and survivors rage over New Jersey's ‘unfinished' 9/11 memorial

Survivors of the September 11 terror attacks and locals have blasted New Jersey's 'unfinished' 9/11 memorial as a 'concrete eyesore.' Officials say the Empty Sky memorial is complete, but one of its designers and the families of those who perished say otherwise. The monument in Jersey City's Liberty State Park consists of two brushed stainless steel twin walls, 210 feet long, the width of each side of the World Trade Center Towers. The names of more than 740 people who lived in or had ties to the state are etched inside the reflective steel but the exterior concrete walls are still bare and have become stained over the years. 'It's a concrete eyesore. It looks horrible,' Jessica Jamroz, one of the memorial's designers, told 'It gives a sense of abandonment and forgottenness.' Locals are not only upset over the aesthetics of the concrete walls, but the names of 18 New Jerseyans are still reportedly missing from the memorial, their families said. And out of the 65 cherry trees that were planted to frame the memorial and bloom each September to symbolize rebirth, only five remain – and are in poor shape, according to the news outlet. 'It feels like the memorial's spirituality is under attack and no one really cares,' Jamroz added. Michael Danatos, whose brother-in-law Brian Martineau died in the 9/11 attacks, called it 'a disgrace.' 'We're bumping up against 25 years and this is the best we can do?' Danatos, who approved the original design of the monument, asked. One of the electronic kiosks for looking up names on the interior panels was not working last week, according to the outlet. 'The risk of leaving the memorial unfinished, and the site neglected, is that it could become over time instead an emblem of forgetting; of the decay of memory,' John J. Farmer Jr., who served as senior counsel to the 9/11 Commission and is the director of the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers University, added. New Jersey officials acknowledged that the memorial is in need of some restoration work, in a statement to but disputed the claim that the memorial is unfinished. 'Unable to secure additional funding for the project, the architect, project manager and the state determined that the memorial must be redesigned to fit the project budget so that New Jersey victims of 9/11 could be honored by the state,' officials said in response to the outlet. 'The architectural design team developed a new design that only included stainless-steel cladding on the interior walls.' Th Department of Environmental Protection manages the memorial and the Treasury funds the upkeep. The departments said the memorial 'is considered complete' in a joint statement. Officials added that the DEP 'is consistently working on longer-term projects to improve the condition of the memorial's trees, lighting, and to modernize the kiosks that assist in locating names on the memorial.' Danatos disagrees. 'It is an irrefutable fact the memorial remains incomplete, even though it was opened to the public in 2011,' she said.

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