(RNS) — Pam Schulz has never seen anything like it.
Just about every home in the Cedar Rapids area has been impacted by the storms that swept across the Midwest last week with hurricane-force winds, according to Schulz, the executive director of St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, a congregation in Marion, Iowa, affiliated with Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ.
Some have trees downed in their lawns. Some have trees through their houses and on their cars.
Some, more than a week later, still don’t have electricity.
And unlike the flooding that swept Cedar Rapids about a decade ago, the damage is too widespread to escape.
“It’s going to be a long recovery,” Schulz said.
“When we had the flood here in 2008, most people who went to serve could come home to a house with air conditioning and what looked normal. Well, you can’t even drive down the street without seeing damage now anywhere in the entire community.”
In Iowa, churches are working together and partnering with faith-based organizations from across the country to offer aid after the unusual windstorm, called a derecho, left a trail of devastation from South Dakota to Ohio on Aug. 10.