I went with a group of guys from my church from Austin to Rockport to help out over Labor Day. We served with Operation Blessing. They provided a brief summary of FEMA disasters that I had not ever heard anywhere else and thought it was worth sharing.
When FEMA declares a disaster area, the feds will pay for 75% of the damages, the state 12.5% and the local city/municipality 12.5%. If you show up as a volunteer and work 8 hours directly helping a family, that is awesome. You directly aided someone in need. But if you first sign up through an organization, they will then track the hours that you work and the type of work you performed, and will submit it to FEMA. Based on the type of work you do, you "earn" a wage. There is a basic wage for general cleanup, a higher wage for operating a chainsaw, and an even higher wage for running heavy equipment (e.g. a bobcat). All of the wages "earned" through volunteer hours go towards the local city's responsibility when it comes to their financial obligation.
So, by signing up through an organization, you not only provide that direct aid to a specific family but you also are helping the community at large meet their cost requirements. This complicates things somewhat if you are trying to help a specific friend - now they would have to register as being in need with an organization, then you would volunteer through that same organization to get the double credit, but it may still be worth doing when looking at the big picture.
When FEMA declares a disaster area, the feds will pay for 75% of the damages, the state 12.5% and the local city/municipality 12.5%. If you show up as a volunteer and work 8 hours directly helping a family, that is awesome. You directly aided someone in need. But if you first sign up through an organization, they will then track the hours that you work and the type of work you performed, and will submit it to FEMA. Based on the type of work you do, you "earn" a wage. There is a basic wage for general cleanup, a higher wage for operating a chainsaw, and an even higher wage for running heavy equipment (e.g. a bobcat). All of the wages "earned" through volunteer hours go towards the local city's responsibility when it comes to their financial obligation.
So, by signing up through an organization, you not only provide that direct aid to a specific family but you also are helping the community at large meet their cost requirements. This complicates things somewhat if you are trying to help a specific friend - now they would have to register as being in need with an organization, then you would volunteer through that same organization to get the double credit, but it may still be worth doing when looking at the big picture.