Homepage
Couple answer call to help in Haiti
NEW VERNON TOWNSHIP — A New Vernon Township couple feel called to help the people of Haiti and are preparing for a trip there in the coming weeks.
Tim and Michelle Mailliard will leave for the island once the airport is open to commercial planes, which they hope will be soon. They’re doing relief work with the International Disaster Emergency Service, a Christian relief organization.
Mrs. Mailliard is a nurse and her husband is a construction worker. They plan to put their skills to work in the earthquake-ravaged area of Port-au-Prince.
There’s a “desperate need” for medical assistance in Haiti, Mrs. Mailliard said. The couple is looking to help in any way they can.
Initially, Mailliard planned to go by himself, as he traveled to Haiti in 2006 with Northwest Haiti Christian Mission to install about 2,500 pews they built for churches. He noted the terrible poverty and how hard it was to see children who were hungry.
Life is much more difficult now, since a massive earthquake last month destroyed homes and killed and injured hundreds of thousands of Haitians.
It’s also not the first time Mailliard has seen natural devastation firsthand. He was with the Marine Corps mission that helped clean up ash in 1991 after Mount Pinatubo erupted in the Philippines and worked to recover bodies after a cyclone leveled part of Bangladesh.
While it’s hard to see people struggling and suffering, Mailliard said he felt he needed to help again this time.
“The Lord was calling me to go, no matter what I was going to be doing there, I knew I should be going,” Mailliard said.
Mailliard, a member of Jerusalem Church in Otter Creek Township, said he was at Bible study when a man who works with the mission mentioned he was going to Haiti. Mailliard said he felt the calling, too.
But after applying to go with the mission group, Mailliard found out all their trips were closed. So he talked with his father-in-law John Canon, pastor at Jerusalem, who got an update from IDES on the social networking site Facebook.com saying they needed volunteers.
“It just all fell into place,” Mrs. Mailliard said. “As one door closed, another opened.”
And while she didn’t intend to go at first, while Mrs. Mailliard was getting things in order for her husband and talking to representatives from IDES, they learned she was a nurse.
“It went from there,” she said, adding that it all happened very quickly for her.
The mission trip would have cost the couple money, but they asked their church families for support and members of Jerusalem and Emmanuel Christian Church, where Mrs. Mailliard is a member, came through.
“Within a week, we had enough for both of us to go,” Mailliard said.
Mrs. Mailliard said they wanted to thank everyone for their generosity.
In fact, donations exceeded what the Mailliards need for the trip and all additional funds are going to IDES. Canon said that 100 percent of money given to the organization goes directly to their mission. Nothing is kept for administration costs, he said.
“The only thing we’ll be out is time off work,” Mrs. Mailliard said.
Mailliard said they haven’t thought about being mentally prepared for what they will see in Haiti.
“We’ll just take what we get and deal with it when we’re there,” Mrs. Mailliard said. “You see stuff on the news but (being there) is going to be a whole different story.”
- Local News
-
-
Court nixes ruling man is sexually violent predator
State Superior Court has denied a local judge’s request to issue a precedential opinion in a rape case.
Continued ...
Mercer County Common Pleas Court Judge John C. Reed had ruled that Chad S. Thompson, 24, formerly of Stoneboro, is a sexually violent predator, but Superior Court said in a 2-1 decision July 8 that an expert’s testimony was insufficient to back that declaration.
-
Stacey wants to continue fight over razed home
Raymond Stacey has requests pending in three courts as he presses his long-running attempt to prosecute the city of Hermitage and those he believes are responsible for illegally demolishing his parents’ house.
Continued ...
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, Philadelphia, on April 29 quashed an appeal because Stacey did not file his argument brief and appendix of supporting documents.
-
Burglars strike while residents sleep: Police issue window warning
Several Shenango Valley residents’ homes were broken into overnight Tuesday and Wednesday while they slept.
Continued ...
Two burglaries in Sharon involved people entering open windows.
-
Commissioners formally move to raise sewer fees
Hermitage commissioners introduced an ordinance Wednesday to increase sanitary user fees.
Continued ...
Residents tapped into the Hermitage Municipal Authority lines now pay $95 a quarter. That rate will bump up to $105 a quarter on Jan. 1, under the proposed rate hike.
Two more hikes on Jan. 1, 2012, and Jan. 1, 2013, will result in the rates increasing 50 percent from the current fee. -
Water is on at Forrest Brooke: Managers: Well pump shorted out
Continued ...
Water service has been restored at Forrest Brooke Manufactured Home Community after well problems left the 165-unit complex dry Tuesday.
A boil and conserve water advisory has been issued by the DEP and will remain in place until tests confirm the water is safe to drink, Forrest Brooke’s manager Pete Havens said.
-
Court nixes ruling man is sexually violent predator
- Sports
-
-
COLLEGIATE NOTEBOOK: Woods has banner year throwing shot
Former Grove City star Kristy Woods winds up to throw the shot at the U.S. Track & Field Championships where she placed 9th in the Junior Division.
KRISTY WOODS of the University of Buffalo boasted a banner 2010 season for the Bulls’ track & field team.
Continued ...
The former Grove City High standout and multiple PIAA placewinner and gold-medalist improved as the season progressed in Mid-American Conference, NCAA and ultimately, national-caliber competition.
- Landino, Gramley qualify for Kings finals
- AUTO RACING NOTEBOOK: Mike Lutz is chip off the old (engine) block
- Grove City Senior LL All-Stars earn berth in state tourney
- Outdoors: Paddling into the Allegheny River headwind
-
- Death Listing
-
-
Deaths from July 30, 2010
David Morgan Boyd Jr., 77, New Wilmington.
Frances B. Deets, 90, Greenville.
Robert M. “Percy” Garrett, 86, West Middlesex.
Edith Louise Smith, 89, Carlton.
-
Deaths from July 30, 2010






