Creating Art for the Cause

On March 21st, the R&R crew took a little field trip off the Rockaway peninsula and into the downtown art scene. There were no Tyvek suits and no respirators to be seen. What was the occasion you ask? Well, to celebrate their new collaboration, Daryl K and Steven Alan hosted a pre-launch party at Steven Alan’s Chelsea Annex, complete with Carlos “Mare139” Rodriguez and Jimmy Raskin hand-painting 2 pairs of vintage Daryl K jeans. The jeans are being auctioned off on Ebay RIGHT NOW and there are only 2 days left to make them yours. Oh, and 100% of the proceeds will help support our work in Rockaway. Did we mention that?

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So, we think these look pretty great, and we also think you should let all your friends know. People who are into Street Art, Fashion, Sandy Relief, collecting one of a kind artworks that you can WEAR if you want to… Plus, these guys do some really interesting work, and Mare139 has been around for a long time, starting with painting subway cars in the 70s and 80s, to becoming the official US Graffiti Ambassador! (We have to admit, we had no idea there was such thing as a Graffiti Ambassador, but we’re glad we know now.) Anyway, it was pretty great to watch him work with Jimmy Raskin at his side, who does some pretty great stuff in his own right.

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So here’s a peek at the finished product! And also, here’s the link to our Ebay page.

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And in case you needed proof to believe the part about no Tyvek suits OR respirators for this occasion, here’s a a little of that, too.

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Thanks to Mother New York for making the intros, and to Max Lakner for the photos.

Meet the People who Make the Magic Happen!

Sandy Streetcar on the Spore Offensive

Sandy Streetcar on the Spore Offensive

It might be hard to believe, but there are people out there who think we’re a little bit crazy to be as obsessed with mold as we are. I’ll admit it might be a little weird to nickname the different types of mold you come across in different homes, or that certain members of our team who shall go unnamed (Hint: Mustache) are able to identify the homes of people we work with by looking at photos of spores. But hey, it’s all in a day’s work.

What’s even crazier is all the amazing people we meet who slave away all week long and STILL want to spend their days off in Tyvek suits with ghostbuster mold vacs, busting their butts to help people affected by Sandy get back to a sense of normalcy, and able to rebuild safely.

We love all the R&R volunteers so much we thought you might want to meet them, too. So with no further ado, welcome to our brand new “Meet the Volunteers” series!

Meet Tanuja
TanujaWorking

In kicking off these virtual introductions it makes sense to start with Tanuja, who’s not only been coming around for weeks now, but also brings along a van full of friends equally committed to helping out in the recovery process. They’ve nicknamed their 13 weeks (so far!) of coming down as weekend warriors the “Sandy Streetcar” project.

Tanuja has been living in NYC for more than 12 years, and like a lot of New Yorkers, has come to feel like she’s in a special sort of relationship with the city. When we interviewed her, she called the City her best friend. And in her blog, she referred to NYC as her husband. The jury is out on whether this constitutes cheating… but either way, every weekend for the last 13 weeks Tanuja and her friends have commandeered a vehicle, loaded it up with friends, and headed to areas affected by Sandy to help out residents trying to get back on their feet and back into their homes.

We asked Tanuja what inspired her to start the project and she said that when she volunteered at a church in Brooklyn the first weekend, “There was this long line of willing and able volunteers, but they lacked transport to get to the areas hardest hit. Some people were afraid to hitch rides out to these spots because there was no guarantee they’d get rides back! And I understood. I’ve lived in Manhattan for over 12 years and never owned a car. When we knew that mobility was a key issue to tackle, we organized and raised funds to help us rent transport. Now that we get a van every weekend, people don’t have to worry about transportation logistics or where to keep our things during the day. And that’s how we’ve been able to do 13 trips and counting!”

Respond & Rebuild encourages all volunteers to come down and join us in doing what we do, but we also have a special place in our hearts for “repeat customers.” Mold remediation requires a very specific method, and quality control is crucial. When people like Tanuja and her friends come down week after week, not only do we spend less time training and more time working, but volunteers start training each other, playing a huge part in our promise to residents: that they are receiving an effective, professional service.

Since the Sandy Streetcar folks have been coming down for so long, they’ve worked in a lot of roles: distribution, mucking and gutting, remediation, and even rebuilding. We know why people keep coming back. It’s important work. And it feels great to know you’re helping prevent the displacement communities often see after disasters, when resources are scarce and rebuilding seems overwhelming. But we also wanted to know why Sandy Streetcar keeps coming back as a cohesive group rather than individually. Tanuja says, “Coming together and working as a group makes all the difference in a disaster recovery effort like this. We need to talk about what we see after spending a day of helping someone pick up the pieces of their home. And frankly, we can achieve so much more as a group than if we just came individually. Because of the camaraderie we build, the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.”

Treating floor joists for mold

Treating floor joists for mold

Having spent so much time reflecting on the work we do and the communities we work with ourselves, we understand how space for collective reflection makes for a more holistic response to disaster, and is crucial for moving beyond simply helping, to truly being in solidarity with the community.

To find out more about what it’s like to come out and work with us, and to see Sandy Streetcar’s take on the many issues faced by New York’s hardest hit communities, check out Tanuja’s blog here.

(Special thanks to Sandy Streetcar’s Gianluca and Cherished Team Leader Kevin LaVerdière for photos.)

Official First Day of Spring Progress Report!

So, we’re not sure about you, but we’re pretty excited to say goodbye to the winter that almost wasn’t and hello to warmer days and fewer layers under the Tyvek suits. (Did we mention it’s REALLY hot in there, even when it’s really cold?)

Out here in the Rockaways, we’ve been able to tell that Spring is coming for a while now, because we’ve had the pleasure of working with hundreds of students who decided to focus on recovering from Sandy during Springbreak.

So far we’ve had students from the Stonybrook Sea Wolves, Fordham, James Madison University, North Dakota, Iowa, NYU, New School, Boston College, Harvard and Princeton. Not a bad line up.

We’ve also had a couple of awesome crews from Center for Employment Opportunities fighting mold steadily for weeks. We love people who keep on coming back, because it means less time training and more time slaying mold, as we like to put it.

With the help of all these guys, March has been a pretty impressive month so far in the Rockaway relief world.

Our last monthly progress report attests to this!

From 2/13 - 3/12:
22 work days
531 total workers (does not account for repeat workers — just a sum of total number of workers in field per day)
24.14 average volunteers/workers per day (including CEO teams)
3065 total hours
$61,300 worth of labor (@$20/hr)
22 unique homes worked in
7 gutting jobs finished
13 mold jobs finished
1 rebuilding job finished
21 total finished jobs (there is some overlap between the three job categories)
145.95 average labor hours per finished job

And we’re still going strong. Check in soon to see our next Spring Break report card, enter our t-shirt design contest, and meet some R&R volunteers.

And keep your eyes out for more signs of Spring in Rockaway. We hear our friend Denise may have some crocuses popping up, and we might have to go see for ourselves….

Announcing Our T-Shirt Design Competition! Think You Can?

PDF Announcement

Can you hone your graphic design skills on a logo that makes mold removal as hip and cool as the Respond & Rebuild staff makes mold removal?

Can you design a rockin “Mold-Slayer” T-shirt?
Can you make “Spore-Busting” the next big thing?

Can you create a design that is as awesome as the feeling you get when you help clean an NYC family’s home of mold?

Think You Can?

Email us your design (find t-shirt templates here), and make sure you have “liked” our facebook page.

Keep checking back and we will put your design on our Facebook page in our
“T-Shirt Design Contest” album, then tell your friends to “like” us too so they can vote!

The three designs with the most votes from our Facebook friends will be voted on by the Respond & Rebuild Team and the winning design will become our first t-shirt!

Guidelines
(1) Submissions will only be accepted from March 14, 2013 12:00 PM (EST) to April 1st, 2013 11:59 PM (EST).
(2) Email submissions to [email protected]
(3) All entry emails should have the subject line “T-shirt Design Contest Submission – First Name, Last Name.” (4) Submit one design per person. If you submit more than one, only your first submission in order of date and time will be considered.
(5) You must be at least 16 years of age to win.
(6) The Design must include “Respond & Rebuild” in the logo somewhere in the design.
(7) Submit only original designs. These designs must not contain copyrighted material and they cannot
have previously won any awards.
(8) Submit front t-shirt designs only. There should be no text or visuals on the back of the shirt.
(9) Attach entries as medium resolution JPEG or pdf files.
(10) Please be prepared to submit the original Illustrator or Adobe Photoshop file
in the case your artwork is chosen.
(11)Any artwork and writing submitted will not be returned, and becomes property of Respond & Rebuild.
NO ADDITIONAL MATERIALS (VIDEOS, SAMPLES, ETC) WILL BE ACCEPTED WITH YOUR SUBMISSION.

Upcoming Event: Understanding Sandy Aid

Believe it or not, we don’t JUST sit around remediating mold around here. We also spend a fair amount of time trying to find out everything we can about the relief process, and passing that information on to people who can use it.

Case in point, this Friday we will host an event at our tool chalet-slash-office space where we’ll have an awesome info session that will help people understand how Sandy Aid works. The details are below, so come on by:

UNDERSTANDING SANDY AID FUNDING
Presentation & Workshop
NYC • NY State • Federal • Non-Profit

• Hosted by Respond & Rebuild
• Presentation by Peter Corless - RockawaysHurricaneSandy
• Free & open to the public

Arverne by the Bay Community Center
74-16 Beach Channel Drive NY 11692
Friday • 8 March 2013 • 7-9 pm

• Learn the present status of Federal, State, City & other aid programs for Sandy survivors and businesses

• Ask your pressing questions or propose your solutions to Rockaway’s most urgent problems

• Participate in round table discussions identifying community needs, current gaps and major concerns

• Your feedback will be shared with the Rockaways Peninsula & Broad Channel Long Term Recovery Group (LTRG)