by Mary Spiller
August 14, 2025
‘We’re not FEMA, we’re simply brothers from Milwaukee.’
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers has declared a state of emergency after torrential weekend rains brought on what specialists are calling a “1,000-year flood” throughout southeastern Wisconsin, overwhelming Milwaukee’s water programs and leaving houses submerged.
The tragedy has introduced collectively a gaggle of group males to volunteer with cleansing up.
As reported by WUWM, for residents like Crystal Trigg and Valerie Raspberry in Milwaukee’s Lincoln Park neighborhood, the flooding was worse than something they’d seen earlier than. “It’s a lake or a river,” Trigg stated. “It’s a lake with no fish.”
Once they known as the town’s 211 hotline, the ladies acquired nowhere. “I needed to Google the appropriate web site,” Raspberry stated. “So I put my data on the web site and no person has contacted me but.”
Whereas many Milwaukee residents struggled to seek out assist, Montreal Cain, whose personal basement was swamped, took initiative. “I acquired a name from my pastor round 7 within the morning saying, ‘Hey, church is canceled,’” Cain recalled. “For me, church is a full workday, so my physique was able to work.”
Cain chronicled his work on Fb Dwell. That impressed others like Aziz Abdullah to affix in. The 20-plus volunteers shaped an off-the-cuff crew to pump out basements, take away ruined property, and verify on susceptible neighbors.
“I stroll [into people’s homes] and persons are like, ‘Oh, FEMA is right here!’ And it’s like, we’re not FEMA, we’re simply brothers from Milwaukee,” Cain stated.
Abdullah described one residence the place floodwaters reached chest-high. A mom there, cautious of opening her doorways to strangers, finally welcomed them in. “I imply one among my guys drove down from Eau Claire and had three children. She made them a pizza,” Abdullah stated. “After some time it’s like we all know new individuals in Milwaukee.”
By later within the week, the volunteers have been serving to Trigg, Raspberry and their neighbors. “And now I can breathe…I can see I’m gonna get to the top of the tunnel,” Raspberry stated. “I can see it now. However, at first, I had no hope.”
Abdullah and Cain are actually a part of a coalition of grassroots leaders—together with Vaun Mays of the Group Job Drive —who organized a GoFundMe marketing campaign to rally group assist for these FEMA-like teams serving to Wisconsin get better.
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