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EMERGENCY ALERT

Deadly tornados have hit the Midwest and left a trail of destruction. In Kentucky, Save the Children is responding to the incredible need but we need your help.

Your donation to the Children's Emergency Fund today supports our lifesaving work in the U.S. to provide children and their communities with emergency relief. Together, we can help communities prevent, prepare for and recover from deadly disasters.

Flooding across eastern Kentucky has once again put children at great risk

In 2022, deadly and destructive flooding across eastern Kentucky washed away roads and bridges, as nearly 45 people lost their lives. Learning was interrupted for thousands of children for several weeks.

Save the Children’s emergency response team and local program staff in Kentucky, where we have worked since 1932, worked around the clock to meet the most urgent needs of children living in some of the areas hardest hit. 

Our Children’s Emergency Fund means we can act as soon as a crisis hits, and deliver life-saving support wherever it is needed, when it matters most. Your donation today can help protect children in the U.S. who are caught up in emergencies.

Our work to meet the most urgent – and the long-term – needs of children impacted by the 2022 flooding in eastern Kentucky

In 2022, with emergency supplies pre-positioned ahead of the flooding, we delivered essential items to eastern Kentucky kids, families and communities – including water, cash cards, hygiene kits, diapers, wipes, cribs, and cleaning supplies for schools – and helped provide critical meals to affected families.

Save the Children has also worked to help children return to learning and support back-to-school efforts at school districts that saw their schools inundated with floodwaters or completely destroyed.

We distributed backpacks filled with learning materials and supplies to children whose schools were delayed in reopening, and books to families to encourage reading at home. We also provided students with digital library subscriptions.

Save the Children has provided children, families and schools throughout eastern Kentucky with tens of thousands of new children books to help replace those lost in the flooding.

Jennifer Garner talks about her mission with Save the Children to help the community in Perry County, Kentucky, still on the road to recovery more than a year after historic flooding. She then surprises students with a donation from Scholastic. NBC’s Cynthia McFadden reports for TODAY on effort to improve the lives school kids impacted by the disaster.

In Photos: 2022 Kentucky Floods