Disaster in Monarch Region: How You Can Help

Ways to help:

Scenes from Angangueo

Flooding of downtown Angangueo

This video clip shows the Romero's store and home (front left). It was taken after peak flooding. The stains on the buildings show the high water mark.


Evacuation of Angangueo
This news video contains footage of Angangueo during the evacuation.


Clean-up Begins
This news video shows clean-up efforts underway and Governor Godoy of Michoacan is interviewed. The footage begins outside Colegio Corrigidora, a long-time Journey North school.


Estela's Red Volkswagen!
Among the flood scenes in this video clip, you'll see Estela's car that was swept away by the rushing river!

map of monarch wintering sites in Mexico

Map
Find Angangueo on this map of the monarch sanctuary region

Overlook above
Angangueo

Send Financial Support

Journey North is coordinating a drive to send financial support to local, community-based, non-profit organizations who work in the monarch region. If you would like to support the work of these organizations, please send a check to:

Journey North
P.O. Box 263
Norwich, Vermont 05055

Your contributions will be forwarded to organizations who are experienced in sustainable development projects and can work strategically and efficiently in the local communities.

Emergency needs are largely being met:
According to our contacts in the region, people are receiving the emergency food, shelter, clothing, and medicine that they need. Government agencies, community organizations, friends and neighbors have organized to provide the most basic needs.

Long-term needs will be great:
Even before the storm, the economy was fragile in Angangeuo and the surrounding communities. Few people have insurance to replace the homes and cars they have lost. The entire infrastructure has been damaged, and it will be a monumental task to rebuild.

Send Letters of Support

Children can provide moral support by sending letters of encouragement to the government leaders who are responding to the disaster in Mexico. These officials will be inspired to know that thousands of children care about the people who live in the monarch region, and are personally connected by the monarch butterfly!

Did You Know?
The 55,000 Symbolic Monarch Butterflies you sent to Mexico were received by children in the very communities that were struck by this disaster.

Try This!
With your letter, include a picture and the name of the school where your Symbolic Monarch butterflies landed. (Click here to search database.)

Send your letters to:
President
of Mexico
Governor
of Michoacan
Presidente Felipe Calderón
Palacio Nacional
Edificio 10, Planta baja,
Col. Centro, Deleg.Cuauhtémoc.
C.P. 06067. México, D.F.
Mexico

Gobernador Leonel Godoy
Palacio de Gobierno
Avenida Madero Pte. No. 63 Col. Centro
Morelia, Michoacan 58000
Mexico

About the Disaster

On Friday, February 5, after extreme rainfall in central Mexico, a disastrous flood struck the mountain town of Angangueo, Michoacan. This little town—which is located at the center of the monarch butterfly overwintering region—sustained extensive material damage and even human loss.

Estela Romero, who coordinates Journey North's Symbolic Migration and whom we've come to know through her visits to area schools, is safe, as is her family. However, the flood destroyed their family store and the first floor of their beautiful old family home. She wrote on Saturday:

"The river running inside our house was jammed with rocks which cracked the structure of our house. The whole ground floor is totally flooded and lost. Our store is also totally flooded and lost. Our cars and truck were taken away by water. We were trapped and were taken out from the back part or our home by a group of courageous town young boys who were among the very few volunteers still remaining in town. I felt we had little possibility to survive if the rain did not stop. I could not imagine how we would spend the night in the house, since the height of the water was rising and enormous rocks were being carried with the rushing river."

The government of Mexico has declared Angangueo a disaster area and thousands of people in the area have been evacuated to nearby towns. The roads into and out of the area, and up the mountain to the sanctuaries, have been damaged extensively by landslides. The rainfall lasted over 48 hours and was the heaviest in 25 years, according to Mexican authorities.