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A winter storm shouldn’t decide who eats, who stays warm, or who can afford next month’s rent. When Winter Storm Fern pushed Northeast Louisiana past the breaking point—power out, roads blocked, fridges thawing—we moved fast with our friends at United Way of Northeast Louisiana to meet families where they were and get help into their hands with dignity.
Meghan Jones, United Way’s Director of Marketing and Communications, walks us through the real-time activation: 211 call data lighting up with urgent needs, a wave of applications crossing 11,000 families, and a clear shift from heat to food as the primary crisis. We talk through the unseen failures that compound a storm—medications that require refrigeration, missed wages for hourly workers, and the impossible tradeoffs ALICE families face between groceries, gas, and rent. You’ll hear why direct, flexible aid often beats one-size-fits-all relief and how partnerships keep efforts focused, fast, and free of duplication.
Together with Centric Credit Union, United Way distributed no-cost gift cards so families could buy what mattered most—formula, prescriptions, fuel, food—without red tape or fees. Centric also offered skip-a-pays and emergency loans to ease the financial shock past the first week. Along the way, we share the stories that guided decisions, like a mother trekking for baby formula in the cold, and the grit of teams working from generators and car chargers to keep 211 and outreach online. Recovery doesn’t end when the lights return; debris, displacement, and budgets need time to heal.
If you want to help, you can text FAMILYRELIEF to 91999, donate at unitedwayneela.org, or stop by 1201 Hudson Lane in Monroe. Subscribe, share this episode with a friend who cares about community resilience, and leave a review with one insight you’re taking forward—your support helps more neighbors find the help they need, faster.
By Centric CU5
88 ratings
A winter storm shouldn’t decide who eats, who stays warm, or who can afford next month’s rent. When Winter Storm Fern pushed Northeast Louisiana past the breaking point—power out, roads blocked, fridges thawing—we moved fast with our friends at United Way of Northeast Louisiana to meet families where they were and get help into their hands with dignity.
Meghan Jones, United Way’s Director of Marketing and Communications, walks us through the real-time activation: 211 call data lighting up with urgent needs, a wave of applications crossing 11,000 families, and a clear shift from heat to food as the primary crisis. We talk through the unseen failures that compound a storm—medications that require refrigeration, missed wages for hourly workers, and the impossible tradeoffs ALICE families face between groceries, gas, and rent. You’ll hear why direct, flexible aid often beats one-size-fits-all relief and how partnerships keep efforts focused, fast, and free of duplication.
Together with Centric Credit Union, United Way distributed no-cost gift cards so families could buy what mattered most—formula, prescriptions, fuel, food—without red tape or fees. Centric also offered skip-a-pays and emergency loans to ease the financial shock past the first week. Along the way, we share the stories that guided decisions, like a mother trekking for baby formula in the cold, and the grit of teams working from generators and car chargers to keep 211 and outreach online. Recovery doesn’t end when the lights return; debris, displacement, and budgets need time to heal.
If you want to help, you can text FAMILYRELIEF to 91999, donate at unitedwayneela.org, or stop by 1201 Hudson Lane in Monroe. Subscribe, share this episode with a friend who cares about community resilience, and leave a review with one insight you’re taking forward—your support helps more neighbors find the help they need, faster.