Skip to main content

DC-area groups trying to help earthquake victims in Turkey

D.C.-area organizations with close ties to Turkey are working to help earthquake victims, and they are looking for support. The Diyanet Center of America in Lanham, Maryland, is taking donations, and Director Ahmet Salih Bayraktar said many people are in a desperate situation.



“People are sleeping outside, in their cars, in the mosques, in sports centers,” he said. Donations of winter clothing and blankets can be brought to the center at 9610 Good Luck Road. Because of ties in the region, Diyanet was able to arrange immediate help right after the earthquake, which killed more than 4,000 people. “We were able to get a truckload of blankets in the early hours to the victims,” Bayraktar said. Another agency helping is the American Turkish Association of D.C. Secretary Ozge Ovun Sert said her agency has also set up a fundraiser for the desperate situation. “The earthquake is not the only problem in that area because there’s also a big winter storm,” Sert said. At least eight large cities are affected, as well as hard to reach rural areas. “It’s really, really bad, like thousands of houses are already demolished,” Sert said. The Urban Search and Rescue Team Virginia Task Force 1, which includes many Fairfax County Fire and Rescue crews, is gearing up to help, as well.

As summer storms approach, Dominion Energy installs taller, stronger power poles in Fairfax Co.

Many adults can recall the wonder of watching utility workers climb the narrow wooden power pole in front of their house — but wonder won't do much to keep electricity flowing when heavy rains and winds batter an undersized, outdated utility pole. "These poles are well-aged and definitely need to be replaced," said Allen Moon, superintendent of contractor resource management with Dominion Energy as he stood in the midst of a replacement project on Bren Mar Drive, in the Springfield section of Fairfax County on Monday morning.
Read Next Story