Senior ministry 4
Olive Branch Café 14
Indonesia volcano 12
Salvationist women 8
Caring for vets in Phoenix 6
NEW FRONTIER MARCH 2014 Volume 32, Number 3
INSIDE this issue: Venezuela unrest The Salvation Army works for peace amid ongoing violent protests.
VENEZUELA PAGE 6
THE NEED FOR WATER
Jamestown cisterns
The Salvation Army partnered to provide home access to clean water for flood victims, allowing families to return. WATER PAGE 7
Inspiring women
We asked and you voted. Here’s the list of your top 10 most inspiring women. WOMEN PAGE 11
Safe latrines
The Western Territory helped fund 80 new toilets in a small Indian village. LATRINES PAGE 17
Summer events
PAID
GLENDALE, CA PERMIT #654
NON PROFIT US POSTAGE
Mark your calendar for all that is upcoming in the West. WEST PAGE 18
California drought affects millions
PRECIPITATION IN CALIFORNIA
BY LAINE HENDRICKS
2010
32.05”
2011
19.55”
2012
24.96”
2013
8.12”
T
hree consecutive years of minimal rain and snowfall resulted this year in the most severe drought in California’s recorded history. Approximately 38 million residents depend on an intricate system of aqueducts, reservoirs, rivers and groundwater, and all are reliant on both rain and runoff from snowpack that collects in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. In the past two months, California Gov. Jerry Brown declared the drought a statewide emergency, and federal officials pledged $170 million to support the initial effects of the dry spell. When California experienced its last drought
Source: WestMap
in 2009, officials cut back water allocations to farmers and other industries. With just 25 percent (and in some areas, less) of the normal water allocation, some farmers in the San Joaquin Valley—the primary agricultural hub for California—abandoned their crops and unemployment rates soared as high as 36 percent. Today, the effects of minimal rain and the subsequent news of no state and federal water allocations have set many farming communities in a tailspin. Crops are going unplanted and livestock is being sold as farmers who cannot irrigate crops or water livestock are forced to downsize operations. Those who support agricultural operations—farm workers, produce packers and transporters—will be rendered jobless and displaced by impacted economies. In Bakersfield, Corps Officers Majors Daniel and Carole Abella are already seeing the effects of the drought. “There has been and will continue to be a loss of jobs, a loss of income for businesses within the community, and DROUGHT PAGE 14
A WORD FROM UKRAINE Divisional Commander
The Salvation Army
P.O. Box 22646 Long Beach, CA 90802-9998
provides an update for The Salvation Army
BY BILL HEELY, LT. COLONEL I want to take this opportunity on behalf of everyone in Ukraine to thank Salvationists across the world for their prayers for peace and protection over recent days. What began as a peaceful protest by students in Independence Square, Kiev, in November 2013 escalated to a major confrontation between protesters and the government, resulting in bloodshed and loss of life in February. An uneasy peace now prevails with many of the protesters remaining camped in Kreschatych Street and Independence Square, the Maidan as it is now known. UKRAINE PAGE 2
We have made it known that The Salvation Army is available to help the victims of the current situation whether protestors or representatives of the regime...’