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Mastercard: L.A. Wildfire Diaries: Stories of Relief, Recovery and Resilience

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By Alexandria Baiz

Mastercard

NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESS Newswire / March 3, 2025 / Starting on January 7, a series of ferocious wildfires erupted in the Los Angeles area, burning more than 40,000 acres and causing roughly $14.8 billion in damages. Within a month, two teams of specially trained Mastercard employees hit the ground to support the American Red Cross's relief efforts, serving thousands of people from all walks of life whose homes and businesses had been reduced to smoking rubble.

"We all have stories to share, and they are what drive us every day," says Deann Donohue, an O'Fallon, Missouri-based vice president in the company's Public Sector Center of Excellence who deployed with the first team of volunteers. "It's providing supplies to the husband whose wife passed the year before who is hoping to find her urn. It's listening to the fire brigade medic whose parents called him to say news reporters were standing in front of his place as it was burning down."

Mastercard launched its disaster relief corps with the American Red Cross in 2019, with 53 employees trained in all aspects of aid distribution, disaster assessment and shelter operations. Today, Mastercard has 687 employees ready to help, some of whom have deployed multiple times, including to Hurricane Helene in North Carolina last year, Hurricane Ian in Florida in 2022 and the western Kentucky tornadoes in 2021.

In the deployment's spare moments, Donohue and Joe Kaczorowski, a senior vice president for Risk Analytics based in Purchase, New York, shared dispatches from their time in Los Angeles.

Day 1: Getting the assignment

It's a stark 2 a.m. wake-up for the Purchase-based volunteers, including Kaczorowski, to make the flight out to Los Angeles. A group of 20 volunteers from different offices across the U.S. are doing the same for this first deployment; another dozen employees will fly out next week to relieve them.

Upon arrival, the volunteers join the Red Cross disaster response operation's stand-up meeting to hear the game plan for the week ahead. "I've already received comments about how they like the energy and collaboration we bring to the mission," Kaczorowski writes. "So it's exciting to feel welcomed here."

At the hotel, it's bittersweet to meet new volunteers and see familiar faces from both Red Cross and Mastercard offices. Some of these same volunteers were from the Hurricane Helene response in western North Carolina last fall.

"I remember from my very first deployment resettling Afghan refugees in Texas that a woman told me that people talk about time differently in the Red Cross," Kaczorowski writes. "It's not, ‘How many years have you been involved?' It's ‘How many deployments have you done?' It's really inspiring to see the shift in the concept of time within our own Mastercard team with so many having done multiple deployments now."