American Red Cross - Northern Mariana Islands Chapter

American Red Cross - Northern Mariana Islands Chapter Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from American Red Cross - Northern Mariana Islands Chapter, Social service, Saipan.

June is National Pet Preparedness Month! The Red Cross's FREE Pet First Aid app puts veterinary advice for emergencies a...
11/06/2026

June is National Pet Preparedness Month! The Red Cross's FREE Pet First Aid app puts veterinary advice for emergencies as well as everyday pet care in the palm of your hand. Be prepared in case your furry friend needs your help 🐕 🐈

Download on the App Store or Text "GETPET" to 90999

While many in the world of soccer fans in April focused on which club would be crowned champion of champions, Robait Rat...
04/06/2026

While many in the world of soccer fans in April focused on which club would be crowned champion of champions, Robait Ratol was understandably focused on other things when his preferred team was eliminated from the tournament on April 14 — the same day that Super Typhoon Sinlaku devastated his community on Saipan.

“It was a scary moment because I was by myself, because my mom, dad and my siblings had to evacuate because of the flooding and the water was rising,” said Robait, the older sibling of two brothers and a sister. “I was there almost the whole night. In the morning time, I evacuated also. I experienced the other typhoon [Yutu] in 2018, but this is the longest one I experienced.”

The family had recently repaired their home, making the damage especially difficult. Half of their home remained unsafe even six weeks after the storm, so all seven of them have been living more closely than normal — but Robait remains grateful.

“My family’s also affected, but I think there’s more families that their house is totally lost and they’re just staying in a tent or shelters,” said Robait. “So I’m here to help them, because at least my family has this — a roof to stay under and a safe place to stay. Some families don’t even have a house right now.”

A week after Sinlaku passed, Robait decided he needed to do more to give back to the community where he grew up. He decided to join the Red Cross — helping drop off supplies at shelters, shuttle disaster responders from place to place, and helping support his neighbors looking for help with their recoveries from Sinlaku. Originally from Bangladesh, Robait also helped translate for the local Bengali population to make sure they understood how to access recovery resources from the Red Cross and other organizations.

“I think the Red Cross did a fantastic job with helping the community recover,” said Robait. “I’ll see in the future, hopefully in the future, I’ll stay with the Red Cross. If there’s any time they need, I’ll be here.”

Emma Corpuz is perhaps happiest in the kitchen with her two daughters, cooking meals together and making memories. Helpi...
04/06/2026

Emma Corpuz is perhaps happiest in the kitchen with her two daughters, cooking meals together and making memories. Helping seems to run in the family, even if her three-year-old’s version often results in making a bigger mess than before she got involved. For Emma, her version of helping is rooted deeply in who she is and how she shows up for her community.

As a volunteer who first raised her hand to help with the Red Cross after Super Typhoon Yutu in 2018, she usually helps people after disasters such as home fires. When Super Typhoon Sinlaku struck, she quickly returned to volunteer to help her neighbors start to recover.

“I’ve always had a passion for helping people,” said Emma. “After Sinlaku, since the day they opened the [service delivery] site, I’ve been there from when it starts til it ends, like every day.”

Alongside her auntie, who by coincidence also decided to volunteer with the Red Cross, she helped run a site on Saipan where impacted residents could come register for emergency assistance with the Red Cross. Together, they grew close with their fellow volunteers, a roughly even mix of local volunteers and Red Crossers from around the country. They bonded over a shared love of bananas, a readily available snack on the disaster relief operation, and affectionately dubbed themselves the “Banana Crew.” They even made custom t-shirts for each other.

“There wasn’t a day where, you know, nobody felt like they were higher than each other or their status was this and this, said Emma. “Everybody felt equal.”

Growing up with family split between the Philippines and Saipan, James Asuncion had lived through typhoons before — Sinl...
03/06/2026

Growing up with family split between the Philippines and Saipan, James Asuncion had lived through typhoons before — Sinlaku was different.

“During the storm, that was my worst typhoon ever,” said James, who is a civil engineer by trade and also tutors math and science as a hobby. “It felt like I was inside a hurricane. My house roof flew — good thing I was with my mom’s house just across the street.”

His mom, who recently had open heart surgery, has a house made from containers and reinforced by concrete which held up better to the storm. As winds grew so strong they couldn’t open the windows, James helped decipher weather maps to try and keep his family — mother, uncle, and his nine-year-old niece — as calm as possible.

After the storm passed, finding themselves without power or water, James set off to start helping. He remembered that one of his favorite beach spots had a shower and fortunately found that its water tank was still usable for his family and him to bathe.

After a week or two of helping care for his family, James reached out to the Disaster Program Manager for the Red Cross of the Northern Mariana Islands — who he had been working with as a general volunteer before the storm. He got to work, distributing emergency supplies, assessing home damage, and supporting warehouse operations. He soon began managing an outpouring of support from local teenagers who wanted to help their community recover.

“I didn’t even notice that I was teaching 69 kids at the same time,” said James. “Basically, they’re just taking shifts, like in the morning some will come and go, and then the other half come in the afternoon.”

He established clear priorities for the teenagers to work on, most importantly managing the lines that formed at service delivery sites by helping make sure people waiting knew the right information to get the help they needed. The final priority was for them to go to the beach and have fun — his way of dismissing them for the day and reminding them to take time for themselves.

“These are our children, our niece, our grandchildren,” said James. “They’ve been asking me, like ‘Kuya [big brother in Tagalog], is Red Cross done?’ They’re sad, basically. I tell them no, we’re not done. We’re almost done with this program but there’s gonna be more programs after this.”

It is CPR & AED Awareness Week! During this week, we recognize the importance of initiating CPR and using an AED as a re...
03/06/2026

It is CPR & AED Awareness Week! During this week, we recognize the importance of initiating CPR and using an AED as a response to cardiac arrest. More than 350,000 people suffer cardiac arrest annually, but less than 10% survive.

Every second counts when responding to cardiac arrest. If you see someone suddenly collapse, become unresponsive, and stop breathing, call or ask someone to call 9-1-1, send someone for an AED, and begin CPR.

Even if you aren’t trained, doing chest compressions (pushing hard and fast in the center of the chest) is better than doing nothing. In many cases, the 9-1-1 operator can talk you through CPR.

Register for Online and In-Person courses below.

CPR: www.redcross.org/take-a-class/cpr
AED: www.redcross.org/take-a-class/aed

An officer of the Red Cross Club at Marianas High School, Daverish Alqueza had been planning for college in Chicago when...
01/06/2026

An officer of the Red Cross Club at Marianas High School, Daverish Alqueza had been planning for college in Chicago when Super Typhoon Sinlaku struck the island. After making sure her home was okay, she was one of hundreds of local community members who set to work supporting her neighbors.

“My home, thankfully, was concrete so we only had minor flooding,” said Daverish. “Our solar panels did come off, but it’s not a big issue compared to a lot of other people. It feels very humbling because I’m able to go home after Red Cross. I have a roof over my head, I have food and I have a generator, so I have power for now. And I see everyone’s houses when I do [damage assessments] or I hear their stories when I’m doing intake [for financial assistance applications.]”

In the span of less than a month, Daverish went from helping organize beach cleanups and leading presentations on CPR and community preparedness to actively helping people impacted by a major disaster on Saipan. She translated for Chamorro-speaking residents, distributed emergency supplies and assisted families applying for aid. As she shared her love for Saipan with volunteers who came to help from around the United States, she found herself reflecting on the responders she got to meet during the relief operation.

“If I met these people under a different situation, they would have been like my grandparents or something,” said Daverish. “Like, can you adopt me? Respectfully, you can be my auntie or something. These guys, they feel like my family – like familia.”

Love to see the incredible work of our young volunteers being highlighted!Since the typhoon struck, dozens of teenagers ...
01/06/2026

Love to see the incredible work of our young volunteers being highlighted!

Since the typhoon struck, dozens of teenagers have stepped up to help their neighbors start to recover. They have been incredible and we are so glad to have their help! 💪⛑️

-Congressional Representative Kimberlyn King–Hinds is back in the C...

31/05/2026

Reminder! Applications for Red Cross financial assistance must be registered by TODAY, JUNE 1!

Zoey King is known on Tinian for her fiery don’ne sali, blending family traditions from the Philippines with local peppe...
28/05/2026

Zoey King is known on Tinian for her fiery don’ne sali, blending family traditions from the Philippines with local peppers that grow throughout the island. But beyond the kitchen, she’s built a reputation for something else: showing up when disaster strikes.

“I have my own process of making it. I learned from my mom and my mother-in-law as well, so I kind of combined what I learned,” said Zoey. “I didn’t know at first if it’s gonna work, but it did! Some people like the way I do it, but some are kinda like, it’s very hot.”

After responding locally following Super Typhoon Yutu in 2018, Zoey’s experience and confidence grew over the years. In September 2024, she found herself watching a destructive storm halfway across the world in western North Carolina — damage that was all too familiar. Traveling to North Carolina would mean leaving home, and pushing past years of social anxiety, but she saw it as a chance to give back and to continue growing. With the encouragement of her husband, Zoey soon found herself nearly 8,000 miles away — the furthest she’d ever been from home — helping people start to recover after Hurricane Helene swept their homes away, just as she saw firsthand back home in Tinian.

After three weeks in Asheville, NC, Zoey returned home to Tinian, where she works as a school aide and raises her family. When Sinlaku struck two years later, she chose to shelter in place at home to help protect the 15 dogs under her care.

"I was laying down in our room, and out of nowhere I heard this loud bang, like something was uprooted or something and fell onto the ground. Unfortunately, it was our outside kitchen connected to our bedroom,” said Zoey. “So that’s when I found out the entire roof was gone, because water started pouring. I said, oh shoot, we lost our roof already. And then it intensifies after that.”

Water came in nonstop from all directions, and Zoey’s family frantically scooped water from their home as the storm passed through. As Zoey helped take care of her family and secured their home as best they could against weather and malintentioned passersby, she saw that her community needed help. She reached out to her mentor at the Red Cross and, a week after the storm hit, she was back volunteering to help tens of thousands of people in her community recover after the disaster.

Among the more than 600 Red Cross responders who came to help after Sinlaku was a woman who had unknowingly crossed paths with Zoey two years earlier, halfway around the world.

Lisa Phinney has always felt at home in western North Carolina, although she has lived a life that carries her to places all over the world. When Helene struck her home in Boone, NC, Lisa was volunteering with the Red Cross in New Mexico. After flying home two days earlier than originally scheduled, she jumped right back into action to help her neighbors through the disaster in her own backyard.

“My home was fine, I had a landslide below my house that took out power to well, everyone in my neighborhood,” said Lisa, who was without power for 10 days. “I stopped at my house for one day, I repacked my bag and I went and checked on the shelter in Boone and made sure they were doing okay.”

As someone who has responded to many major disasters with the Red Cross, Lisa is no stranger to meeting fellow volunteers who have helped on the same operations as her. Still, Lisa couldn’t help but smile when Zoey saw the North Carolina region on her name badge and shared that she also helped respond to Helene.

"It was really cool, I mean she’s from a small island in the middle of the Pacific and yet she went all the way to North Carolina for this opportunity to help,” said Lisa. “So she helped my area, and now coincidentally I’m here helping hers. It’s just kind of a neat full circle moment.”

For her part, Zoey also appreciated the symmetry of the moment. From a small island in the Pacific to the mountains of North Carolina, their paths had crossed without them knowing.

"The majority of my deployments are here in the CNMI, and Guam as well. Actually, North Carolina is my first time in the U.S.,” said Zoey. “It’s good to know that another person from that region is actually returning the favor, you know? Lisa is here right now, and that’s just nice to see — another person from where I was, helping my community.”

Though Lisa is intimidated by the fiery hotness of Zoey’s don'ne sali, she is no stranger to spicy foods. As a fellow lover of cooking, Lisa is perhaps most proud of her buffalo chicken soup. They may trade recipes instead of disasters next time, but the bond remains strong: showing up when it matters most.

28/05/2026

Protect your health and your home after flooding by taking the right steps to safely clean up mold. Mold can begin growing within 24 to 48 hours, so acting quickly is important to prevent further damage and reduce health risks.

The Commonwealth Healthcare Corporation encourages our community to follow these 8 safety tips when cleaning mold-affected areas:

✔️ Wear protective gear
✔️ Remove water-damaged items
✔️ Keep spaces ventilated
✔️ Use fans and dehumidifiers safely
✔️ Never mix cleaning chemicals
✔️ Scrub and dry surfaces thoroughly
✔️ Fix moisture problems completely
✔️ Dry your home as quickly as possible

Stay safe, protect your family, and take precautions during cleanup efforts. For more information and resources, visit the CDC guidance on mold cleanup.

Address

Saipan
96950

Opening Hours

Monday 08:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 08:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 08:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 08:00 - 17:00

Telephone

+16702343459

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when American Red Cross - Northern Mariana Islands Chapter posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to American Red Cross - Northern Mariana Islands Chapter:

Share

Category