Eight months after Hurricane Katrina ravaged the people and landscape of New Orleans, a tidal wave of Southern Baptist volunteers is needed to help rebuild the historic city and surrounding areas.
North American Mission Board president Bob Reccord announced a $5 million, two-year rebuilding project called Project NOAH (New Orleans Area Hope), which will use Southern Baptist volunteer labor to rehab more than 1,000 homes and 20 Baptist churches over the next two years. The program is slated to be up and running by the end of April.
“Project NOAH is a challenging plan that represents a new level of commitment and cooperation, because Southern Baptists should consider nothing less,” Reccord said of the NAMB effort that will be coordinated in partnership with the Louisiana Baptist Convention and New Orleans-area Baptist associations.
Reccord said the $5 million earmarked for Project NOAH is part of the $22 million contributed by individuals, churches, state conventions and other organizations for Southern Baptist cleanup, recovery and rebuilding ministries. NAMB immediately sent $11 million of that money to the state Baptist conventions in the hurricane-affected Gulf states.
“Project NOAH gives Southern Baptists a framework for demonstrating our cooperative mission spirit among NAMB and our Southern Baptist mission partners in the Gulf and across North America,” Reccord said. “This promises to be a good case study of the strength we have as Southern Baptists. It’s actually a microcosm of our Acts 1:8 strategy and our commitments to Empowering Kingdom Growth.”
David Hankins, executive director of the Louisiana Baptist Convention, said he is “very excited” about the new initiative.
“I think it will be an opportunity to help people in real-world ways and have a lot of implications for people coming to know the Lord. It will be done in concert with local churches and will help them get to know more people … and even plant new congregations,” he said.
“Project NOAH is a very good example of the cooperative network of Southern Baptists – all levels of our work coordinating together from the local church, association, state conventions and the North American Mission Board,” Hankins continued. “We think this will have a synergistic effect of people donating more time and materials when they see what’s being done by Southern Baptist volunteers.”
Over the predicted two-year life of Project NOAH, an estimated 52,000 construction volunteers from throughout the United States and Canada will be needed, said Jim Burton, NAMB’s director of volunteer mobilization.
“Although Project NOAH will serve churches in the affected areas of New Orleans,” Burton said, “it will also open up a highly sought-after pathway of service for hundreds of Southern Baptist churches throughout North America that strongly want to help respond to the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.”
Baptist disaster relief volunteers already have contributed nearly 165,000 “volunteer days” in Katrina’s aftermath. Using a pay rate of $17 an hour for an eight-hour day, the labor value of Baptist volunteer relief work already exceeds $22 million, Burton said. He estimates the value of the in-kind contributions of volunteer labor needed for Project NOAH at more than $36 million.
Southern Baptist churches interested in obtaining more information about sending Project NOAH teams may call 1-800-462-8657, ext. 6134, or (770) 410-6134, or go to www.TheBridge.NAMB.net.