Sonoma County fire survivors embrace roles as guides and counselors to latest wave of disaster victims
Iskander was there to gather information. She could not foresee that night that she would soon become an expert on insurance issues herself, and go on to create a blog and website that would help thousands of fire survivors navigate the ordeal of settling claims with their insurers.
The speaker advised those with the same insurance companies to band together. Iskander looked around at her fellow
"Honestly, I didn't want to form a group," she said. "I really wanted someone else to form a group."
She shared that account earlier this month on a Zoom webinar called Survivor 2 Survivor, moderated by
They belong to a growing club they wish did not exist ? a band of fire survivors burned out of their homes. "It's a s--t club," said Iskander, "and we don't want any more people in it."
Still, in that
"Unfortunately, you all are looked to as experts in this area," said
Coonerty's goal: "To get some wisdom from people who have already learned how to effectively respond to this, so we're not reinventing the wheel."
Sherwood and his fellow block captains have heard from survivors from
He, for one, is glad to help. "Other than being with my family," he said, "there's nothing I'd rather be doing than helping a stranger who just lost their home."
'We can't help ourselves'
Five months after Iskander walked into that church, she unveiled her new website, Neighbors Together. It is packed with practical information that has saved fire survivors time, heartache and ? conservatively ? hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Had she always wanted to start a website? "Are you kidding?" she said. "I didn't know anything about them."
But she dove in. Her site became a clearinghouse of information for fire survivors. "Then I could direct people to it" so they "were not out there in the cold, possibly getting shafted because they didn't know something," she said.
Lately, she allows, the website has gotten "stale." Between her full-time job and the time demands of renovating her new house in
But in the next breath, she talks about how she reflexively sprung into action after the Walbridge fire destroyed more than 150 homes as it burned across 86 square miles of northwestern
Said Iskander, "We can't help ourselves."
Survivor goes to
But the work became "therapy," said Frazee, a teacher, who soon became an activist and dynamo. Volunteering at the
Frazee gently suggested that she call the adjuster back. "You have three years, not two," she said.
And that hard-won difference was no small thing. "It's personal," Frazee declared.
In
And the industry continued to hold firm against
Thousands more since then have joined that club, and they have Frazee to thank in part for that benefit of extra time.
In
So they stopped at the
'Begin with the end in mind'
The year was 1964. Newman and his friends rushed north and fought the Hanly fire without changing out of their evening finery.
"I felt if there was ever another incident in the valley, I couldn't imagine being a spectator," said Newman's son, Scott, who started training with the
He was not a spectator the night of
Newman and three other volunteers went to bed early at the fire station. Around midnight, the wind woke them up. They drove two engines to a property neighboring the
With
More than 170 homes were destroyed in the wildfire,
Two things made the loss slightly less painful for Newman. His ranch home was not his primary residence. And his family's mementos weren't gone.
Remarkably, he had been through this before. He was engaged in
After the Tubbs fire wiped out 65 homes in
His advice to the county's most recent band of fire survivors came in a recent Survivor 2 Survivor conversation: "Begin with the end in mind."
If you do that, and proceed methodically, and don't let anyone rush you, he said, you can start the job knowing that in three years, "you're going to have rebuilt the place better and stronger and more fire resilient than it was before."
Sucker-punch timing
Until recently,
Since 1915 the property has been in the family of his wife,
"So I've been chain sawing for four years," he said.
Grout joined forces with
They didn't know how soon.
Grout, who has worked for
It listed a dozen or so top priorities. The neighborhood COPE group had begun work on some of those when a dry lightning strike -- one of an estimated 12,000 in the state over several days in mid-August -- ignited what would become the Walbridge fire. It would go on to char 17,000 of the 19,688-acre
"I think you have to acknowledge the irony, the sucker-punch timing, in our particular case," Grout observed.
Since the fire, he's been dividing his time between helping the community deal with its loss, "and also just sorting through my own family's drama with three parcels, three houses and 100 acres gone."
He might find comfort in the words of Sherwood, the block captain in
"It's going to take a lot of work, and time, but you will succeed," Sherwood said. "You will be OK. You're not alone."
You can reach Staff Writer
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