May 25, 2005: Headlines: COS - Thailand: Tsunami: Crisis Corps: Peace Corps: Stephen Bydal of Warrington, Pennsylvania departs for Thailand - Six Americans left on May 25 to to help victims of December's tsunami in South East Asia
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May 25, 2005: Headlines: COS - Thailand: Tsunami: Crisis Corps: Peace Corps: Stephen Bydal of Warrington, Pennsylvania departs for Thailand - Six Americans left on May 25 to to help victims of December's tsunami in South East Asia
Stephen Bydal of Warrington, Pennsylvania departs for Thailand - Six Americans left on May 25 to to help victims of December's tsunami in South East Asia
Stephen Bydal of Warrington, Pennsylvania departs for Thailand - Six Americans left on May 25 to to help victims of December's tsunami in South East Asia
Peace Corps' Second Crisis Corps Team to Depart for Thailand
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 25, 2005 – Bringing a wealth of experience from occupations that include the former mayor of South Bend, Ind., to a public relations and media account specialist, six Americans will depart on Wednesday, May 25 to travel to Thailand as Crisis Corps volunteers.
The second Crisis Corps Thai team includes volunteers working in the fields of carpentry to youth activities. All will be putting their career skills to use to help the survivors rebuild and focus on the future. Specifically, three carpentry volunteers will work to build furniture for citizens in the displaced persons camps, as well as provide construction training for camp residents and other volunteers. One small business development volunteer will work with tsunami survivors to find markets to sell their goods and handicrafts, as well as teach small business training. A volunteer camp project advisor will help to coordinate volunteer projects through the Tsunami Volunteers organization, working in the displaced persons camps. One youth activities volunteer will work in a displaced persons camp to provide youth recreational activities in sports, art and crafts, and music — to help youth deal with the tragedy and also to provide positive activities to focus their energy. And, in June, a water systems engineer will depart to facilitate and oversee engineers and local authorities as they construct and maintain a water system to bring clean water to residents.
Stephen Bydal of Warrington, Pennsylvania is a member of the second Crisis Corps Thai team. Having just completed his tour in March 2005 with the Peace Corps in Thailand as a secondary school English teacher, Bydal will now work as a carpenter with the Crisis Corps. He will be one of three Crisis Corps volunteer carpenters that will construct furniture, and other items need by residents of the displaced persons camps, as they transition to permanent housing. Bydal will also work to find new sources of materials and provide construction training to camp residents.
Bydal has 10 years experience writing and developing educational media in collaboration with educators and producers in the United States and Thailand. He has also volunteered with Habitat for Humanity, renovating apartments for low-income families in Newark, N.J. Bydal received his bachelor’s degree in communication from Temple University in Philadelphia.
More than 550 returned Peace Corps volunteers have taken the opportunity to use their invaluable skills and experience to address ongoing community needs in over 30 different countries since Crisis Corps’ inception in 1996. Crisis Corps volunteers work on short term projects, utilizing the skills they learned as Peace Corps volunteers and in post service careers. To find out more about the Peace Corps' Crisis Corps program, please visit the Crisis Corps page.
When this story was posted in May 2005, this was on the front page of PCOL:
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Story Source: Peace Corps
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Thailand; Tsunami; Crisis Corps
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