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Mission Yearbook
06/04/2025
06/04/2025

TODAY IN MISSION YEARBOOK

Mission Yearbook: Presbyterian Disaster Assistance staff visit several partners in San Fernando Presbytery

In halting words, a woman recounted being awakened at 4 a.m. to evacuate her home as her neighborhood was engulfed in an inferno propelled by 90 miles-per-hour winds, explosions happening all around her.

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La Cañada Presbyterian Church
La Cañada Presbyterian Church in La Cañada Flintridge, California. (Photo by Rich Copley)

She and her family went to a 24-hour Denny’s to wait, and when they tried to return a few hours later, they were told by the fire department, “‘It’s too dangerous. Let it burn,’ which is a hard thing to hear about your own neighborhood.”

Another speaker recalled a neighbor returning to their neighborhood the next day. When the neighbor’s husband made a turn, she asked why, and he said, “We’re on our street.”

Presbyterian Disaster Assistance (PDA) personnel ended their solidarity visit to Southern California following the January wildfires the way they began: hearing from people directly impacted by the fires and talking about the path forward and how PDA might be involved.

At La Cañada Presbyterian Church in La Cañada Flintridge, they also heard about a church that immediately went into action as the fires blazed, providing financial and material support and care for people impacted, and that has continued to evolve its response.

“Before disaster recovery was set up, this church was taking care of us,” one person said.

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Rev. Dr. Ross Purdy
The Rev. Dr. Ross Purdy, pastor of La Cañada Presbyterian Church in La Cañada Flintridge, California, talks to visitors from Presbyterian Disaster Assistance during a visit on March 11. (Photo by Rich Copley)

The Rev. Dr. Ross Purdy, the church’s pastor, and the Rev. Dr. Cindy Frost, associate pastor of Outreach and Spiritual Formation, talked about programs the church has put in place including time the church is open so people can come hang out in a safe and comfortable space to teams leveraging professional expertise in the church to help people navigate their path forward.

Earlier in the final day of their solidarity journey, PDA leadership heard from communities impacted in different ways by the fires. Though the North San Fernando Valley did not experience the fires, many residents worked in the communities that were burned and have lost those jobs from full-time to per-service occupations.

PDA leadership visited the Refugee Children Center and North Valley Caring Services, which have responded to immediate needs presented by the wildfires through its status as a donation hub and programs like its weekly drive-thru food pantry. They are separate groups and serve different needs, though they share several things in common, including a campus in the San Fernando Valley.

Both organizations are also led by people who come from the communities they serve.

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Mayra Medina-Núñez
Mayra Medina-Núñez, Executive Director of the Children's Refugee Center, talks to members of the Presbyterian Disaster Assistance delegation about the Center's work. (Photo by Rich Copley)

Refugee Children Center Executive Director Mayra Medina-Núñez is a native of Oaxaca, Mexico who came to the United States as an unaccompanied minor and “went through everything,” people with that status endure, she said. Now a naturalized citizen, she found faith through a Bible study, attended UCLA and went to work in legal, social and humanitarian services.

“I see this as God’s plan,” she said of the work she now does, serving families who are refugees, particularly children, at the center. “What would have happened if I had a support system when I first arrived.”

North Valley Caring Services Executive Director Manny Flores grew up in the area he says is regarded as the worst place in the country for an adolescent to grow up. Though he was raised in a family of faith, he said as a teenager, “I became a stereotype,” his interest in the gang life surrounding him piqued.

After a long-term prison sentence, he applied at the community center, and “despite my background, got a job.” Now he focuses on giving children in the area options he didn’t have, including the Teen Tech Center, a creative hub that includes a variety of endeavors from screen printing to a recording studio and video lab.

“This is not an academic program. It’s an entrepreneurial program,” Flores says. “But it turns back to academics because you can’t run a business if you don’t know how to review the financials or read a contract.”

Previously, North Valley Caring Services has been the recipient of a grant from the Presbyterian Committee on the Self Development of People as well as the Presbytery of San Fernando. Flores was open about the desire to forge new partnerships to help grow its work, as is the Refugee Children’s Center.

Rich Copley, Multimedia Producer, Interim Unified Agency (Click here to read original PNS Story)
 

Let us join in prayer for:

Kyle Nolan, Associate Ministry Relations Officer, Presbyterian Foundation
Clara Nunéz, Associate, Program Administration, Self-Development of People, Interim Unified Agency 

Let us pray:

Loving God, open our eyes to those in need in our community. Give us courage to address their needs and show your love to all­ — today and every day. Amen.