Upper Valley Red Cross volunteers remain committed in spite of dwindling ranks
Feb 01, 2026
Linda Nordman, of White River Junction, closes up a Red Cross storage unit in West Lebanon, N.H., on Wednesday, Jan. 21. Nordman, who says she is sometimes “a bit fanatical” about being prepared,” keeps her van loaded with kits of toiletries, phone chargers, teddy bears, pet food and resource
s for people who have been impacted by fires and other catastrophic events. “I know what it’s like to be desperate and need help.” Photo by James M. Patterson/Valley News
This story by Clare Shanahan was first published in Valley News on Jan. 30, 2026.
WHITE RIVER JUNCTION — For over a decade, Linda Nordman was on the end of a 24-hour emergency hotline for the American Red Cross.
At the drop of a hat, Nordman got calls from first responders, folks in need or anyone who had her number requesting assistance. It might be setting up emergency shelters for weather and power outages or supporting first responders stationed at crime scenes and during missing persons searches. Most often it was supporting responders and victims during structure fires.
“Everybody had the number because I gave it to everybody, anybody I helped,” she said. “And I just answered any time it rang.”
Nordman, 74, recalled comforting a mother following a fatal fire, watching as first responders searched all day only to find a body in the wreckage of a home and making sandwiches for three days to feed crews battling a brush fire.
“It was worth it at the end of the day when I helped somebody,” Nordman said. “It does more for my mental health than it will ever do for the Red Cross, to be honest.”
Nordman, who is now retired and lives in White River Junction, first became a Red Cross volunteer during the response to Hurricane Irene in 2011 and her enthusiasm for the Red Cross has not waned in her 15 years of volunteering.
What has caught up with her is fatigue. And she has noticed the number of volunteers in the area dropping.
She has handed in her Red Cross phone to the organization, but she is still always on call and regularly responds to emergencies in the Upper Valley. She fits in her volunteering around spending time with her children and grandchildren. Though she will always go to a disaster if she can, “there are times when you get call, after call, after call.”
Volunteer Red Cross disaster action teams around the United States are trained to respond to local emergencies to support disaster victims by providing money and supplies, and connecting them with other support services. They also support emergency workers on disaster scenes and set up and run shelters.
There are 36 Red Cross disaster volunteers across Orange, Windsor, Grafton and Sullivan counties who logged over 1,000 hours collectively in 2025, Jennifer Costa, a spokesperson for Red Cross of Northern New England, said.
George Sykes watches a recorded training for the Red Cross’s emergency shelter management software at his home in Lebanon, N.H., on Friday, Jan. 23. Sykes, who joined the Red Cross after retiring as deputy chief of the Lebanon Fire Department in 2006, has also served on the Lebanon City Council and is a New Hampshire state representative. “It’s really important in your life, I think, to have a purpose,” said Sykes. Photo by James M. Patterson/Valley News
Not all of the volunteers participate equally, said Lyndsey Morin, the Red Cross community disaster program manager for Southern Vermont. Morin is a paid staff member of the Red Cross.
“I do see unfortunately quite a bit of inactivity, but our teams that are active are very, very active,” Morin said.
In the core of the Upper Valley, Nordman and two others — George Sykes and Cristina Hammond — top the list of regular responders and are the only volunteers in the area trained for casework.
“Even if they’re super busy in their home lives, they’re always active. They’re always going to calls,” Morin said. “But, they’re getting called for all of them, so that’s what we’re trying to mitigate.”
George Sykes, right, talks with Badin Osner, a water and sanitation engineer for the Haitian Red Cross, at the site of a new American Red Cross warehouse facility under construction in Petionville, a suburb of Port au Prince, Haiti, in February 2011. Sykes worked with the Red Cross’s recovery efforts there for two years following a 7.0-magnitude earthquake that struck in 2010. He has 20 years of service with the organization, about half as a volunteer, and half as an employee. Photo by Jason Johns/Valley News
The Red Cross always emphasizes that volunteers can say no to an assignment, Morin said, and encourages them to take care of themselves. When local volunteers aren’t available to be on scene, volunteers can meet with families virtually or, in less immediate situations, can plan a time to meet with residents when they are available.
The organization also recently hired a new recruiter in the area, and staff such as Morin have done tabling events to try to drum up volunteers.
The Southern Vermont contingent of the Red Cross, which covers Bennington, Orange, Rutland, Windham, Windsor and Washington Counties, has seen an uptick in volunteers recently, Morin said, but getting volunteers adequately trained continues to be a problem.
“In order to train these people for the … home fire response, there has to be more home fires and we don’t want that to happen,” Morin said.
Instead, she has been offering virtual or in person practice “to give these folks that are not always going on calls more experience.”
Sometimes, Sykes, a Lebanon city councilor and a Democratic state representative, will respond to multiple Red Cross calls in a week while also balancing a job at Staples in West Lebanon, being a caregiver for his wife and his political work.
“We are shorthanded, particularly in the Upper Valley. I wish we had a deeper bench,” Sykes said in a recent interview.
Red Cross volunteer Linda Nordman, of White River Junction, right, talks with shop foreman Chris Harrington, while handing out candy to workers at Key Chevrolet in White River Junction on Jan. 21, 2026. “Volunteering … does more good for my mental health than it will ever do for the Red Cross,” said Nordman. Photo by James M. Patterson/Valley News
When the phone rings
When there is a disaster, first responders can call the Red Cross for support. Local volunteer duty officers then contact responders like Sykes and Nordman based on their distance from the incident. When the phone rings for a local assignment, volunteers have five minutes to accept or deny.
The Red Cross tries to keep daily disaster assignments within 50 miles of a volunteers’ homes, Morin said. But, with small numbers, that distance can climb.
In his 20 years of experience with the Red Cross, Sykes has worked in the Upper Valley and abroad responding to major disasters in Haiti, Puerto Rico and across several states.
“I wear a hat that has a red cross on it in the hopes that somebody will engage me and I can chat about it,” Sykes, who is in his 70s, said in an interview earlier this month. “They’ll see the hat and say, ‘Oh I give blood,’ and I’ll say that’s great … but there’s another side to what we do.”
Sykes started working with the Red Cross after retiring from the Lebanon Fire Department, where he’d been deputy chief, in 2006. Joining the organization was a natural transition and he “found that it was a mission that I could really sink my teeth into because it was so important to help people,” Sykes said.
Sykes worked for the first several years as a paid emergency services director coordinating volunteers around the region. After about five years, Sykes was laid off, but stayed on as a volunteer.
In 2010, he opted to take on what was supposed to be a one-month volunteer stint to assist with recovery after a catastrophic 7.0 magnitude earthquake devastated Haiti. He agreed to take on the assignment on a Wednesday and found himself on the ground in the island nation the following Sunday for what turned out to be a nearly two-year job.
“It’s an accident of birth that prevented me from being in these same circumstances,” Sykes told the Valley News while in Haiti in 2011. “And it’s that realization that gives you the energy to work harder and do more.”
After returning from his “transformative” deployment in Haiti, Sykes continued with the Red Cross and did several other week or month-long deployments.
In July 2024, Sykes spent a month running the team that went town by town across Vermont to catalog the impact of devastating flooding and its damages. Every day, he drove 50 miles from his Lebanon home to a worksite to manage the team.
But, like Nordman, Sykes’ most frequent responses are for disasters closer to home such as house fires.
Read the story on VTDigger here: Upper Valley Red Cross volunteers remain committed in spite of dwindling ranks.
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