Log in to WRAL.com with one click using your favorite social network:
OR
Log in using your WRAL.com account:



Wrong email/password combination.

Forgot password?

Register with WRAL.com using your favorite social network:
OR
Register for a WRAL.com account using our web form.

Login Options

5:43 p.m. • 11-14-12

Weather Forecast for Raleigh

  • Thu: Light Rain.
    • Hi: 49° F
  • Fri: Partly Cloudy.
    • Hi: 55° F
  • Sat: Mostly Cloudy.
    • Hi: 54° F

Other Locations

> 7 Day Forecast

Doppler Image

Marketplace Links

Social Links

Main Menu

Published: 2012-11-14 17:00:00
Updated: 2012-11-14 17:35:03

For Cary group, Sandy relief efforts are more than just helping


NC Baptist Men
NC Baptist Men
e-mail print friendly

Some of the towns hardest hit by Hurricane Sandy more than two weeks ago were in northern New Jersey – towns like Toms River.

More Info     Long Beach, N.Y. damage Hurricane Sandy recovery: How to help

It's there that the home of 80-year-old mother Ann Vett was flooded in the storm – and it's one of many places volunteers with the Cary-based North Carolina Baptist Men are helping residents slowly but surely rebuild, not only their homes but their lives.

At Vett's house, where she's lived for 35 years, volunteers from World Overcomers Christian Church and First Baptist Church of Cary are gutting it so that crews can come in and fix the damage that Sandy caused.

"They just do it," Vett's son, Lee Spilner, said. "They ask if you need help, and they help you."

More Info     Long Beach, N.Y. damage Amanda Lamb: Glimmers of hope

The group of approximately 200 volunteers has set up a mini-city in Toms River – as well as the New Jersey cities of Piscataway, Meadowland and Atlantic City – with everything they need to help others, including food, fuel, water and even a laundry facility. In addition to helping with damaged homes, it has provided more than 250,000 meals to hurricane victims throughout New Jersey and New York.

Volunteers, like Winslow Thornton, can relate.

His mother's house – the New Orleans home he grew up in – was destroyed after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. He helped clean up and rebuild her home.

"I understand the loss," Thornton, of Cary, said. "So, I wanted to come up and do what we can to lift their spirits. It's a monumental effort."

Whether they're feeding, cleaning out, or consoling, the volunteers say that they can't help but be moved by what they're seeing.

Jimmy Lawrence, a relief manager from Rockingham County who is helping oversee the recovery in Toms River, likens the devastation to that on the Gulf Coast – "New Jersey's Katrina."

"We're dealing with people that are going through, probably, the worst time in their lives, and we need to minister to them," Lawrence said. "That's the only way I know how to put it – to be there for them, cry with them, laugh with them, talk to them. Whatever it takes, that's why we're here."

For Lawrence, the work is more than just volunteering. He says it's a calling.

"I think God is involved in this. I know he's involved in this, and I know that I've got to do this," Lawrence said. "We're putting feet on God's love."

And the love is not lost on those who receive it.

"I hope someday we can pay it forward to someone else," Spilner said. "If I keep talking, I'm going to cry. That's how much I feel for these people that are helping everyone. Not just us – everyone."


1 Comment


WRAL.com welcomes your comments on this story. All comments are moderated prior to publication based on our posting guidelines. Please review them prior to posting and if your message is not approved.

View Comments 1 COMMENTS

Please Log In to add a comment.

Latest Comments
Anyone wishing to help those in the Northeast affected by Sandy can rest assured that the NC Baptist Men apply 100% of all donations to helping others. They are all volunteers and this organization is absolutely trustworthy with any funds you send them. I hope you will give today. Their website is secure.

View Comments 1 COMMENTS
Report It