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Montanans offering support for Los Angeles fire victims

There are Montanans who are doing what they can to support their California neighbors.
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GREAT FALLS — Friday, Feb. 7 marks one month since the Los Angeles fires began.

While the fires are now mostly contained, there are still thousands of people displaced and looking for help.

Among the chaos, there are Montanans who are doing what they can to support their California neighbors.

“It has been a great opportunity, to be here and to help our, our neighbors in California," said Valerie Ballard, a volunteer services program director for the Red Cross said.

Watch the full story:

Montanans offering support for Los Angeles fire victims

Ballard — who's from Gardiner — was one of three Montanans who shipped out to California with the Red Cross to help with the disaster.

“When the requests for help came in for a role that I have some training in, I couldn't pass up the opportunity to help this community that [has been] impacted by this devastating fire," Ballard said.

Ballard is the regional program director for the Red Cross here in Montana and is now using her skills to organize the hundreds of local volunteers trying to help their neighbors in L.A.

She says that, among the destruction, the people bring hope.

“This overwhelming support from the local community, people really leaning in, wanting to help their neighbors in any and every way possible.”

Ballard says the best way to support California is to donate money to the Red Cross or take part in one of their blood drives.

Ballard said, “It gives them the opportunity, to make decisions on their immediate recovery. And it helps, reset and refuel the local economy that's been so devastated by these wildfires.”

More than four dozen Montana firefighters have been deployed to California to help battle the fires, including a team of pilots from Billings.

Watch related coverage: Whitefish firefighters share experiences battling California wildfires

Whitefish firefighters share experiences battling California wildfires

A real estate agent in Augusta is offering support in a unique way.

“We have 13 rooms and, watched, you know, in horror as these poor people lost their homes and thought that we could do something," Lynn Kenyon, owner of Outlaw Women Saloon, said.

Kenyon is offering housing to displaced Californians — 30 days free of charge at the motel, and space in their RV park as well.

“They have nothing and they're people, and so we're trying to be charitable and Christian-like and give them a room,” Kenyon said.

For Kenyon, not trying to help was never an option.

“People lost pets. They lost family. To watch everything you ever built just burn up in front of you and have nowhere to go. I mean, they're in desperate situations, and we're very blessed and have the ability to do it.”

Montanans are helping neighbors, even if they are 1,000 miles away.

To learn more about the Red Cross and be more prepared for an emergency, click here.

More info on rooms available at Augusta MT Motel and RV park here.