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Page 1 of 2 "We will be okay." That is what most people I encountered on the Gulf Coast are saying. They are not sure how or when, but they are just sure they will be okay. It was a difficult, humbling experience to spend time with people - collision industry people - whose lives had turned into chaos overnight. With no good end in sight, maybe they were trying to convince themselves - and me - when they repeated "we will be okay."
| Denny and Cindy Schenck give the world a 'thumbs up' five months after Hurricane Katrina. They will be okay! | Over six months since Hurricane Katrina ravaged and forever changed lives, some people are beginning to rebuild and some are still at a dead stop. A technician who received tools from the Collision Industry Relief Organization told me, "This is not about homes or jobs anymore, this is about lives." I had been working on a catastrophe team since the first of October. Having lived in the residue of three catastrophic hurricanes, I was about to leave the war zone, but I couldn't leave without checking on our industry brethren. I had to see more. | Standing in what was the bed liner booth are Denny Schenck, (l) and a long-term employee (and friend) who lost his home and is living in a FEMA trailer in the shop lot. | In my own small way I wanted to help. The night before I drove back into Hell's Kitchen, I stayed at the New Orleans Marriott - the very same Marriott where many of us celebrated NACE many years ago. This night, December 29, 2005, downtown New Orleans was a vanishing shadow of the rowdy, crowded, gleeful streets of NACE days. Downtown New Orleans was circled in a shroud of darkness. It was still dark when I left the empty Marriott parking garage the next morning, heading for the St Bernard Parish. With no appointments and no schedule, I drove to the isolated sadness. Here is one chapter in this book of our lives being rewritten after the hurricane season of 2005. A little bit of luck CarCraft in Chalmette, Louisiana, St. Bernard Parish, may have been one of the luckier places in town - if there was such a thing as luck here. CarCraft sits on the highest elevation in the Parish. Perhaps for that reason, the buildings are still standing. It was five months after the hurricane when I drove by CarCraft and saw the doors open. I parked my car next to a 'camp' of travel trailers at the gas station across the street and walked into the shop, where the floors were clean and the shop was full of cars. A gentleman was sweeping the floor. I asked him if I could speak with the owner. "Yes, ma'am," he said as he led me through the downstairs skeleton of an office up a newly built staircase. Calvin "Denny" Schenck, owner of CarCraft was sitting upstairs in his temporary office, deep in conversation with an old friend. I introduced myself and asked if I could speak with him and take some pictures. His southern gracious smile answered "yes." Building a good life 1968 was a banner year for Denny Schenck - July 1 he opened CarCraft, July 13 he turned twenty-years-old and July 20 he married Cindy. Over the years the Schenks worked hard, overcoming life's trials and tribulations, to build a good life for themselves, their family and their employees. Business was good, as CarCraft became well established in Chalmette. CarCraft repaired police and fire departments vehicles along with maintaining a thriving community customer base. Thirty-eight years later their lives irrevocably changed. The Schenck's had a historic home in Chalmette, a horse farm in Folsom, Louisiana, a collision repair center, a truck collision repair center, a mechanical shop and a towing company.
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