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Home Based Business

Wis. Firefighters assist in search for survivors [Video]

STATE CHARGES. RIGHT NOW, WISCONSIN FIREFIGHTERS ARE IN NORTH CAROLINA AS HURRICANE HELENES DEATH TOLL SURPASSES 150. 12 NEWS HANNAH HILYARD SHOWS US HOW THE CREW IS HELPING IN THE SEARCH FOR SURVIVORS IN SOME OF THE HARDEST HIT AREAS. OH MY GOD. DEVASTATION AT EVERY TURN. YOUVE SEEN THE FOOTAGE. ITS A HORRIBLE SITUATION. THESE FOLKS ARE IN ON THEIR NORTH CAROLINA IS NOW RECEIVING A HELPING HAND FROM WISCONSIN. A SPECIALIZED GROUP OF FIRST RESPONDERS KNOWN AS TASK FORCE ONE, IS THERE ON ASSIGNMENT. IT IS MADE OF MEMBERS OF DIFFERENT FIRE DEPARTMENTS FROM AROUND THE STATE THAT HAVE DIFFERENT CAPABILITIES THAT CAN ASSIST IN COMMUNITIES GREATEST TIME OF NEED. THE CREW IS MADE UP OF 16 FIREFIGHTERS FROM ACROSS THE STATE. THEY ARRIVED SATURDAY NIGHT THERE, SO IT WAS A 24 HOUR TRIP TO GET THERE ROUGHLY. THEYRE HEALTHY. THEY ARE STILL IN FOOD AND WATER SUPPLY, SO THEYRE DOING GOOD. THERE AND THEY ARE DOING SOME REALLY GOOD WORK. MILWAUKEE FIRE CHIEF AARON LIPSKI IS THE PRESIDENT OF THE WISCONSIN STATE FIRE CHIEFS ASSOCIATION, WHO HELPED SUPPORT THE TASK FORCE. WHAT EXACTLY ARE THEY? THEY DOING WHILE IN NORTH CAROLINA? YOU CAN IMAGINE THEYRE INVOLVED IN SWIFT WATER RESCUES. THEYRE INVOLVED IN WATER SURFACE SEARCHES, ACCESS TO BUILDINGS THAT ARENT ACCESSIBLE BECAUSE OF WATER FLOODING, MUDSLIDES. SO THEYRE GOING TO BE INVOLVED IN SEARCH AND RESCUE OPERATIONS, PRIMARILY THEIR COURAGE AND EXPERTISE ARE DESPERATELY NEEDED. IT FEELS GOOD TO HAVE WISCONSIN PART OF THIS. THIS MORE GLOBAL COMMUNITY. AND HANNAH HANNAH JOINS US FROM THE NEWSROOM TONIGHT. HANNAH, HOW LONG WILL THE 16 MEMBER CREW BE IN NORTH CAROLINA? WELL, DEREK, THAT IS ACTUALLY UNKNOWN RIGHT NOW AS THEY ARE STILL TRYING TO ASSESS THE NEED. NOW, THE TASK FORCE, THEY HAVE A 130 MEMBERS TOTAL, INCLUDING SOME FROM HERE IN MILWAUKEE. THEY WERE RECENTLY DEPLOYED CLOSE TO HOME TO ASSIST DURING THE

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Small Business Funding

Biden and Harris to travel, survey Hurricane Helene damage [Video]

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will visit hurricane-ravaged areas in the Southeast Wednesday to assess the damage and coordinate relief efforts and funding.Biden will travel to North and South Carolina, while Harris will head to Georgia.On Tuesday, Biden directed “every available resource” to rescue and recovery efforts and has committed to helping devastated communities, saying he is prepared to ask Congress for more emergency relief funding.”We have to jump-start this recovery process. People are scared to death. People wonder whether they’re going to make it. We still haven’t heard from a whole lot of people,” Biden said. “This is urgent. People have to know how to get the information they need. So, we’ll be there until this work is done.”Biden says he has been in constant contact with state and local officials and is urging people to apply for federal assistance, including basics like food and water and for funds to help with repairing homes.More than 4,500 federal workers, including 1,000 from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, are deployed across the Southeast. Many are working to distribute millions of meals and water, thousands of tarps, and over a hundred generators, while rescue teams hope to help those who remain trapped.Biden and Harris emphasized the timing of their trips, saying they must ensure they do not detract from ongoing rescue and recovery.The White House suggested an earlier visit, like former President Donald Trump’s trip to Georgia on Monday, could take away from resources needed for hurricane victims.During that trip, Trump falsely accused Biden of “sleeping” at his beach house, ignoring the disaster and purposely neglecting Republican states and storm victims. He also falsely stated Biden did not respond to calls for help from Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp.Kemp and Biden had already spoken a day earlier. Kemp and other Republican leaders also said their states were getting everything they need.Wednesday’s trip to Georgia may also present a political opportunity for Harris a chance to show empathy in the midst of a humanitarian crisis as she campaigns for president.Harris says she also plans to visit North Carolina in the coming days.

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Small Business Marketing

Some workers still missing after flooding at Tennessee plastics plant [Video]

As the rain from Hurricane Helene came down harder and harder, workers inside a plastics factory in rural Tennessee kept working. It wasn’t until water flooded into the parking lot and the power went out that the plant shut down and sent workers home.Several never made it. Video above: families desperate for answers about missing family membersThe raging floodwaters swept 11 people away, and only five were rescued. Two of them are confirmed dead and part of the death toll across the affected states that passed 150 Tuesday. Four others are still unaccounted for since they were washed away Friday in the small town of Erwin, Tennessee, where dozens of people were rescued off the roof of a hospital.Video below: Drone footage shows flooding in Erwin, TennesseeSome workers managed to drive away from the plant, while others got caught on a clogged road where water rose enough to sweep vehicles away. Videos show the brown floodwaters from the adjacent Nolichucky River covering the nearby highway and lapping at the doors of Impact Plastics.Jacob Ingram, a mold changer at the plastics factory, filmed himself and four others waiting for rescue as bobbing vehicles floated by. He later posted the videos on Facebook with the caption, “Just wanna say im lucky to be alive.” Videos of the helicopter rescue were posted on social media later on Saturday. In one video, Ingram can be seen looking down at the camera, a green Tennessee National Guard helicopter hovering above him, hoisting one of the other survivors. In another, a soldier can be seen rigging the next evacuee in a harness.Impact Plastics said in a statement Monday it “continued to monitor weather conditions” on Friday and that managers dismissed employees “when water began to cover the parking lot and the adjacent service road, and the plant lost power.”In interviews with local news outlets, two of the workers who made it out of the facility disputed those claims. One told News 5 WCYB that employees were made to wait until it was “too late.” Another, Ingram, made a similar statement to the Knoxville News Sentinel.”They should’ve evacuated when we got the flash flood warnings, and when they saw the parking lot,” Ingram said. “We asked them if we should evacuate, and they told us not yet, it wasn’t bad enough.”Worker Robert Jarvis told News 5 WCYB that the company should have let them leave earlier.Jarvis said he tried to drive away in his car, but the water on the main road got too high, and only off-road vehicles were finding ways out of the flood zone.”The water was coming up,” he said. “A guy in a 4×4 came, picked a bunch of us up and saved our lives, or we’d have been dead, too.”The 11 workers found temporary respite on the back of a truck driven by a passerby, but it soon tipped over after debris hit it, Ingram said.Ingram said he survived by grabbing onto plastic pipes that were on the truck. He said he and four others floated for about half a mile (about 800 meters) before they found safety on a sturdy pile of debris. Impact Plastic said Tuesday it didn’t have any updates.”We are devastated by the tragic loss of great employees,” company founder Gerald O’Connor said in the statement Monday. “Those who are missing or deceased, and their families are in our thoughts and prayers.”Hurricane Helene’s death toll increased Tuesday as searches in multiple states continued. Survivors were looking for shelter and struggling to find running water, electricity and food. Others in the region are bracing for barriers to voting.The two confirmed dead at the Tennessee plastics factory are Mexican citizens, said Lisa Sherman-Nikolaus, executive director at Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition. She said many of the victims’ families have started online fundraisers to cover funeral costs and other expenses. Bertha Mendoza was with her sister when the flooding started, but they got separated, according to a eulogy on her GoFundMe page authored by her daughter-in-law, who declined an interview request.”She was loved dearly by her family, community, her church family, and co-workers,” the eulogy read.___AP journalists Rhonda Shafner and Beatrice Dupuy contributed from New York.