Community Stories
Funding Shortage
Cedar Rapids had a disaster in the billions and received funding in the millions.
Human Toll of a Flooding Disaster
More than 5,000 homes flooded, almost 20,000 residents displaced, 268 residents still living in FEMA trailers… thousands have lost their homes, their jobs, their churches and their neighborhoods.
Disaster Recovery Takes Years
Cedar Rapids is still suffering from the flooding and storms it experienced last May and June. We still have a long road ahead to recover from the worst natural disaster in Iowa’s history.
Disaster + Recession = Serious Problems
This flooding disaster was so extreme that the financial cost goes beyond the ability of the city and state to deal with the recovery. The current economic recession adds to our struggle.
Helping Ourselves
When many people around the nation are fighting for individual economic relief, Cedar Rapids citizens voluntarily passed a sales tax increase that is expected to bring in millions of dollars a year.
City Still Looks Like a Disaster Area
Many areas of Cedar Rapids still and will continue to look like a disaster because the city has not received the proper funding.
Cedar Rapids Helping Others
Cedar Rapids purchased temporary flood protection measures; however, due to flooding in other areas the city sent its equipment to prevent more devastation in North Dakota and Minnesota.
Volunteer Labor Saves City
Thousands of volunteers from all over the country have spent their spring breaks and will spend their summer in Cedar Rapids gutting houses, cleaning yards and rebuilding homes.
Community Contacts
- Catherine Kriewald, VP, Marketing and Communications
ckriewald@cedarrapids.org
319.730.1410 - Cassie Willis, City Communications Liaison
c.willis@cedar-rapids.org
319.286.5055 - Jessica Palmer, Director of Marketing and Research
jpalmer@cedar-rapids.com
319.538.1312
- Quinn Pettifer, Director of Marketing and Community Relations
quinn@downtowncr.org
319.398.0449 - Joi Bergman, Grants and Communications Manager
joi.bergman@linncounty.org
319.892.5118







Volunteer Labor Saves City