Kyle Parkinson boarded a plane Monday for a two-week trip over the holidays that will be far from a vacation and far from her family.
Instead, the 60-year-old from Champlin will spend Christmas volunteering with the Red Cross in Kentucky on the heartbreaking mission of comforting survivors of the devastating tornadoes that ripped through the region overnight Friday and killed more than 70 people.
"This is much more important than being at home opening up Christmas presents on Christmas Day," Parkinson said after flying from Minneapolis to Nashville and driving two hours to Mayfield, Ky. "When you think about what is the spirit of Christmas, isn't it being there for one another, helping one another?"
She's one of 19 local volunteers the American Red Cross Minnesota and Dakotas Region is deploying to Kentucky, Arkansas and Missouri after deadly tornadoes leveled communities there. The Minnesotans, North Dakotans and South Dakotans will help set up shelters, provide health services and give spiritual and mental health care to victims.
"The devastation like this is just hard to almost comprehend unless you see it," said Carrie Carlson-Guest, spokeswoman for the local Red Cross region, which is headquartered in Minneapolis. "It's really overwhelming to see when there's nothing left."
Carlson-Guest said more volunteers will likely be sent in the coming weeks to aid in the aftermath of the tornadoes that hit six states stretching from Arkansas to Illinois.
In the past two years, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the local Red Cross has sent dozens of volunteers to help with a growing number of environmental disasters — from the hurricanes in the South to the furious West Coast wildfires of 2020. The nonprofit, which also helps Minnesotans after house or apartment fires and local disasters, such as last summer's massive northern Minnesota fires, deals with fewer local crises than other states and so is often quick to deploy volunteers elsewhere.
"We're one of the first ones they call," Carlson-Guest said.