But it's played the role many times before, said Robert
Warf, a Sunday school teacher who was directing traffic into the surrounding
fields.
Members of the Hellbent Motorcycle Club 823 Chapter were
handling security for a Camp Fire shelter at the East Avenue Church in Chico on
Nov. 13. (Alex Emslie/KQED)
"I think we're extremely organized," Warf said.
"We've been doing this every time there's a need."
The need has been overwhelming since last week, when the
Camp Fire ravaged the nearby town of Paradise and displaced some 52,000 people.
Volunteers had separated donated clothing, bottled water,
toiletries and other essentials in different areas around the church yard.
Warf said they had to start turning down clothing donations
— the church received much more than was needed. He had a list of other
donations that would be helpful: Visa gift cards of at least $28 so people can
set up post office boxes to receive mail, tents in good condition and new
sleeping bags.
"We need new shoes," he added. "These people
don't have anything, and some of them were running down that hill and don't
have shoes. ... They don't have to be fancy shoes."
People wearing medical scrubs and stethoscopes moved among
the crowd, and food was available in a large hall inside the building.
A burned bus sits along Skyway Road in Paradise on Nov. 13.
(Alex Emslie/KQED)
Chapter president Matt Straus said the club showed up Sunday
with a bunch of personal hygiene kits to donate.
"I thought that there was only about 50 people here or
so, and we made 100 of them," he said. "As soon as we showed up, we
noticed that there was a need for a lot more. We barely even put a dent in
anything."
He said about a dozen bikers from his club and others have
been at the church ever since, handling security.
"We're patrolling all of this area, making sure nobody
is breaking into any cars because everybody knows that they've got their stuff
in their cars," he said. "That's the last thing anybody needs — to be
victimized more than they have already been."
Al Lopez and Penny Spaletta have been staying in a tent
behind the church since Thursday, when they fled the fire that would destroy
their Paradise home. They'd both noticed fire on a neighboring property early
Thursday morning. Lopez said he grabbed a fire extinguisher and tried to put
out some smoldering grass in the field across the street.
Al Lopez and Penny Spaletta fled the Camp Fire and took
shelter at the East Avenue Church in Chico. (Alex Emslie/KQED)
His wife, Spaletta, had been trying to douse their own
property with a garden hose. Both decided it was time to leave.
But they made a stop, to pick up Spaletta's mother. By the
time they were headed down the hill toward Chico, traffic was moving slower
than the fire. "We're in this inferno on either side of us, and we
can't go anywhere," Lopez said.
Spaletta said she could feel intense heat through the
windows of her car. "I honestly didn't think we were going to make it
out," she said.
They did make it to Chico by late Thursday afternoon, but
had no idea where to turn next. Then a friend called and suggested they head over to the
East Avenue Church.
"This church is wonderful," Spaletta said.
"They're feeding us very well. They're giving us necessities to live day
to day, and it's so wonderful." Lopez said he was able to confirm their home in Paradise was
destroyed.
"The only thing standing is the brick for the
foundation and the chimney," he said. The couple left three pet cats behind when they fled.
Spaletta said she'd held out hope that they could have survived until she
learned the house was gone.
"It goes in waves," she said. "I was hoping
that three of our pets — that the house had stayed and they were inside. And
when he came back and he told me the house was gone, I knew that they had been
lost in the fire."
Spaletta and Lopez said they're not sure where they'll go
next.
"We've never been through anything like this
before," Lopez said. "All we can do is just put one foot in front of
the other — you know, build a bond with these people that are going to go back
up that mountain."
They said they found a new sense of community at the East
Avenue Church. And when they can, both said they'd like to rebuild in Paradise.
"These people here, they're becoming our new
family," Spaletta said.
SOURCE: KQED