Thursday's Update...
In La Joya, the church is now clean. They lost everything- sound system, generator, etc. The mud was up waist high as well. The whole community is in clean-up phase- it looks a lot better than yesterday but they have a long way to go.
We had a meeting this afternoon with our pastors to make plans for disaster relief. It was a great meeting and I ask you to pray that this project will be the beginning of a renewal of working together to reach the city. Each of us has assignments to do community assessments for the areas most affected and Sunday we will meet together to establish priorities and formalize a plan.
This Sunday all of our churches are going to worship in La Joya and then serve food to the community. Pray for our kitchen crews as they prepare 700+ meals! More importantly, pray for our witness in the community during this time of crisis and frustration, that they will find real peace and lasting joy in Christ.
Below is the latest from AP on the disaster..
SANTIAGO, Dominican Republic (AP) - Survivors of a devastating flood lashed out at authorities Thursday for not warning that a dam's floodgates were being opened during Tropical Storm Olga, unleashing a deadly wall of water that killed as many as 20 people.
President Leonel Fernandez, who promised aid while touring the area to view the destruction, did not comment on the decision to rapidly release the water. He blamed global warming for the rare December storm with torrential rains.
The death toll stood at 25 across the Caribbean, including two other deaths in the Dominican Republic, two in northern Haiti and one in Puerto Rico.
As Olga began lashing the Dominican Republic with rain Tuesday, officials slowly released water from the Tavera Dam into the Yaque River, Octavio Rodriguez, a member of the committee that oversees dams during emergencies, told The Associated Press.
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The late-night decision gave authorities too little time to warn people living downriver - many of them already in bed.
Police and local officials took to the streets as midnight approached to warn that a devastating flood was on its way. But many people said they had just 15 minutes - or less - to flee before a wave of water 66-feet deep slammed into their homes.
"They warned us but there was no time ... everybody was sleeping," said 50-year-old Sonia Duran Maldonado, her voice shaking. "They must beg our forgiveness for what has happened."
On Thursday, dazed residents wandered through muddy wreckage that used to be a neighborhood.
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Orlando Franco, a senior engineering professor at Santiago's Pontifica Universidad Catolica Madre y Maestra, said authorities released too much water and failed to have an effective alarm system in place.
"If there was a proper alarm system, this would not have happened. There would not have been a single death," Franco said.
Rodriguez, the dam committee member, said the panel was aware of the danger but was forced to release the water to avoid a collapse of the dam as rapidly accumulating water built up pressure behind it.
"We knew the damage we were going to cause below. We did not want to, but we had to," he said.
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Dominican emergency authorities searched for the dead in Santiago province, where at least 20 fatalities were confirmed. Homes were filled with mud and people looted some residences looking for food or supplies.
The storm displaced more than 34,000 people and damaged more than 7,500 houses, Dominican officials reported.
An elderly woman and a 3-year-old boy were killed in northern Haiti, where poor infrastructure could delay reporting on the storm's aftermath for days, said Marie Alta Jean-Baptiste, head of Haiti's civil protection department.










