Business Standard

Hurricane Harvey: Dell, Samsung, other corps donate $170 mln for relief

More than 185,000 homes were damaged and 9,000 destroyed

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Press Trust of India Houston
US corporate giants have pledged a whopping $170 million for disaster relief operations to help victims of Hurricane Harvey, one of the most destructive storms in US history that killed at least 47 people.

More than 185,000 homes were damaged and 9,000 destroyed as 42,000 people remain in shelters amid overflowing rivers and reservoirs, Texas officials said.

Harvey has soaked Texas with the heaviest rainfall in US history.

Authorities continue to search for survivors and made helicopter rescues from rooftops as the death toll from Harvey climbed to at least 47.

Companies have pledged $170 million to relief efforts as of Thursday, according to an estimate from the US Chamber of Commerce.
 
Fifty-two companies had donated $1 million or more as of that time. These figures are constantly growing as pledges continue to pour in.

Tech billionaire and Houston native Michael Dell has committed $36 million to Hurricane Harvey relief efforts.

The founder and CEO of Dell and his wife Susan yesterday also announced the launch of the Rebuild Texas Fund, along with Texas Governor Greg Abbott.

The goal is to raise more than $100 million for immediate relief efforts, as well as longer-term recovery and rebuilding.

"This disaster is personal to everyone who has roots in Texas," Michael and Susan Dell said in a statement.

"Both of us were born and raised in Texas, and the street Michael grew up on in Houston is under water now."

Companies from from energy to airlines are pitching in with Walmart pledging $20 million and Verizon $10 million, CNN reported.

"Companies are really starting to leverage their core assets so it's not just checkbook philanthropy," said Marc DeCourcey, senior vice president of the US Chamber of Commerce Foundation.

FedEx and UPS, for instance, have pledged $1 million each, including the use of their delivery networks to help orchestrate relief efforts, the report said.

Samsung split its $1 million commitment between cash to the Red Cross and $500,000 worth of washing machines, dryers and other household electronics for distribution by Texas nonprofits, it said.

JPMorgan gave $1 million to the Red Cross and waived late fees on mortgages and credit cards for customers affected by the storm, it said.

The Chamber is tracking donation totals, DeCourcey said, but it's too soon to predict whether the corporate relief efforts for Harvey will reach the $1 billion milestone recorded after Hurricane Katrina and Superstorm Sandy.

The airlines are also getting in the act.

Southwest said it plans to give five million frequent- flyer points to cover relief-related travel for the Red Cross, veterans-service organization Team Rubicon and disaster-zone staffing nonprofit All Hands Volunteers.

American and United are giving bonus miles to customers who donate to selected disaster-relief organisations.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Sep 02 2017 | 12:48 PM IST

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