Title
Mennonite Disaster Service. Restoring Hope Through Long-Term Recovery Volunteers
Record Type
Video
Contact
Kevin King
Year
2,022
Publisher
Imara IHG

Summary
Kevin King (MDS) discusses restoring hope through long-term home rebuilding rather than financial aid. MDS focuses on the years after a disaster, using volunteer labor and resilient construction like "continuous load paths." Recovery success relies on local case management to identify those in greatest need.
Description
In this talk, Kevin King, Executive Director of Mennonite Disaster Service (MDS), explains how MDS supports disaster survivors across the United States and Canada by mobilizing and organizing volunteers—not by writing checks.

MDS’s mission is to restore hope for disaster survivors through:

* Cleanup, repair, and especially long-term rebuilding of homes
* Volunteer teams who rotate weekly from across the U.S. and Canada
* Partnerships with local and national organizations that help identify the right homeowners and coordinate recovery

Kevin emphasizes that many emergency managers focus on the first 10–20 days of response, but MDS’s core work is recovery—the long stretch after the headlines fade, when families still need a safe home.

What you’ll learn in this segment

* What MDS is (and isn’t): a volunteer network of churches focused on rebuilding homes for people who lack the means to recover otherwise
* Why case management matters: MDS depends on local long-term recovery committees and case management partners to identify families with real need (not secondary properties like hunting cabins)
* Building for today’s risk: examples include elevated homes and construction designed for high wind loads, with a “continuous load path” concept
* The emotional reality of recovery: how volunteer presence helps survivors feel less alone, and how home dedications become a powerful milestone
* How MDS decides where to deploy: the Four-Pillar Principle