It鈥檚 been more than a week since Hurricane Irma.
Yet many smaller communities in Florida鈥檚 rural counties are still suffering and need basic resources, according to a disaster relief expert with the .
鈥淚t鈥檚 frustrating; it鈥檚 terrible especially for those who are still without power. I鈥檓 not seeing it (desperation) in terms of mass chaos, that people are angry. Everybody is frustrated,鈥 said Kevin Smith, .
Smith, who has more than 20 years of experience in disaster management with the Salvation Army, said people are distressed. But just like what he witnessed in Houston while helping Hurricane Harvey victims, he said, Floridians are really stepping up and helping each other.
The Salvation Army is among the first to show up when disaster strikes with mobile 鈥渇eeding units.鈥 Smith said they have 61 food trucks currently operating in Florida and have served 477,000 meals as of Monday, both from the trucks and in shelters.
Spanning out from the Keys north to Jacksonville, their mobile units are also in more rural counties where there are logistical challenges.
On Monday, Smith said they served 5,000 meals in Highlands County and 8,000 meals in Collier County to residents still without power.
鈥淰ery rural parts of Florida are often forgotten when a tragedy like this occurs,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淭he attention goes to ground zero on the coast, but there鈥檚 a lot of suffering, damages to the crops that they rely on.鈥
He said residents in agricultural and less populated counties worry they're being overlooked and forgotten.
鈥淭hey need to know that we care. I mean, I鈥檓 not giving you the speech, I鈥檓 giving you the truth. They need to know that there are people concerned about them from state, local and our non-profit organizations. We鈥檙e trying to get the resources to them and provide them an opportunity that gives them access,鈥 Smith said.
Smith participates in daily calls with emergency managers from the local, state and federal levels. He gives them details on where meals are in demand because those are the same communities that also need more resources.
鈥淭here are many folks we're serving now that have never received services either from the Salvation Army or from the state and federal governments. So they didn't pop up on anybody's radar on how significant that need was.鈥
Smith said, even when power is restored, the Salvation Army will not shut down its disaster services. Instead, they will transition into providing food boxes, toiletries and help to replace items people lost in the storm.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 leave when the disaster is over,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淭he Salvation Army has been in these communities before it began, and we鈥檙e going to be with it long after as we continue down the road just like we were in Hurricane Andrew, in the hurricanes of 2004, across central Florida. We were there then and we鈥檒l be there after this one too.鈥
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