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Red Cross Volunteer: Recovery Process 'Far From Over' In Texas

David J. Phillip/AP/NPR

People from all over the country are in Houston to help the city recover from catastrophic flooding brought by Hurricane Harvey, including one woman from Wichita who brings a unique empathy to her role.

Rosalind Scott and her husband have been volunteers with the Kansas Red Cross for all of two weeks. They’ve been working the 12-hour night shift at a community center in west Houston for about five days, helping to feed and provide shelter to residents displaced by the storm.

Credit Courtesy Rosalind Scott
Rosalind and her husband signed up to be Red Cross volunteers two weeks ago.

Rosalind says the area is drying up, and some shops are starting to re-open. But she says there’s a lot of work to be done.

“It’s far from over because everybody’s life was uprooted and it takes a long time to recover from it, and it’s gonna be a long, long process," she says.

And she would know—Rosalind lived through the flood that hit Kansas City in 1993.

"I know what it's like to be in the situation of the people whose house got flooded," she says. "We rebuilt, and they’re rebuilding. And, you know, you become a stronger person from it.”

Rosalind says she and her husband are already planning to return to Texas to continue helping after their first Red Cross deployment ends.

Follow Nadya Faulx on Twitter @NadyaFaulx.

To contact KMUW News or to send in a news tip, reach us at news@kmuw.org.

Nadya Faulx is KMUW's Digital News Editor and Reporter, which means she splits her time between working on-air and working online, managing news on KMUW.org, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. She joined KMUW in 2015 after working for a newspaper in western North Dakota. Before that she was a diversity intern at NPR in Washington, D.C.