As a Louisiana storm veteran living in the bayou region of the state, Gayle Dardar already had a home generator. Unfortunately, Ida sent pieces of wood straight through it.
“It was just like a bullet crashing into it,” Dardar, a resident of Pointe-Aux-Chenes in Terrebonne Parish, said.
She solved that problem by hauling the generator off of her shrimp boat and using it to power her home. But there was another hiccup — how to pay for gas. Dardar needed lots of it; not only was the power out for a full month, but the area lost its internet connection too, making credit cards nearly worthless.
“You couldn’t use your Visa,” Dardar said. “You didn’t have access to your bank account. You didn’t have access to any of those things.”
Enter the Helio Foundation. The small charity, based in Lafourche and Terrebonne Parish, says it’s given away more than $160,000 in cash to people on the bayou after Ida, and it got the money from online fundraising. The aid group drove down and put $400 in Dardar’s hand, which allowed her to keep her generator fueled.
“This was a blessing,” she said. “They have just made it so much better.”
Dardar says she’s also thankful for groups like the Red Cross and the meals it provides. But the Red Cross has been criticized for how it uses resources, including spending some on public relations and on aid some people don’t need or can’t use. For example, the Red Cross sent pork to a Jewish retirement home after Superstorm Sandy.
One of the advantages of cash aid is that it comes with no strings attached. It put the decision-making power back in the hands of the people who knew best what Dardar and her neighbors needed — themselves.
“They didn’t even have to spend it on something specific,” Dardar said. “It was theirs. It was a gift for them to use whatever it took to make their lives easier.”
People affected by storms can also be cut off from their jobs for weeks or months — the Helio Foundation is also working on a program to restore overturned fishing boats in the bayou — furthering the need for cash to cover the everyday bills and expenses they can no longer pay for. That’s part of the reason why the Helio Foundation expects to continue sending cash for months, if not years, to come.
“We can’t survive in this country without money,” said Raegan Duplantis-Creppell, executive director of the Helio Foundation and its lone employee.