Posts Tagged ‘gonaives’

HAITI: Notes from the Field 2/23/10

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

An update from David Campbell, HODR Executive Director:

Haiti PhotosFriends,

I have just finished my second trip to Haiti since the Jan. 12th earthquake, and am moved by both the breadth of the devastation and the enormity of the response effort. The challenge of providing an appropriate human response, in a poor island nation with weak infrastructure, after an event that hit the major urban area and seat of government, has been overwhelming.

Supplies of water, food, and fuel seem stable, and the port is now receiving container shipments. The airport has reopened to the first commercial flights since Jan 12th. Schools, hospitals, homes in the hundreds of thousands, have been destroyed. The official death toll is now reported at 230,000.

But the people are moving forward. In spite of the media reports I see busy streets, people working together to cope, initial steps to rebuild lives.

We’ve opened our HODR Project Leogane, in a large abandoned concrete building that sustained minimal damage; we’ve added water, kitchen, bunk beds, hired cooks and drivers, and opened for volunteers a week ago.

We’ve already cleared rubble from several homes to allow the families to start on the path back, and have a clear, safe place for tents and transitional shelter. In the future we’re planning to clear many more homesites, help build transitional shelters (normally about a 12 x 18 sq ft space), temporary classrooms, and help in every way we can. We expect 60 volunteers on site this weekend, and will ramp up to our full capacity of 100 volunteers each day in March.

Our expectation of an initial 6 month project cost is $500,000, our largest effort since Hurricane Katrina. Your support is essential by volunteering and monetary donations. The IRS has allowed any donations made by Feb 28th to qualify as 2009 deductions, so please use that extra incentive to send a donation to help now. Click here for details from the IRS.

To make a contribution today or volunteer with us in Haiti, use the buttons to the right.

Thanks,

David Campbell

HAITI: Project Leogane Announcement

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Announcing Project Leogane, Haiti 2010, earthquake response project. This extraordinary disaster has had a devastating impact on the entire fabric of Haiti, and we are anxious to help.

The country has suffered over 110,000 lives lost; in Leogane, where we will focus our efforts, an estimated 90% of the buildings were destroyed. This will be a serious project, cooperating with other local and international NGOs, to help the community of Leogane recover from this massive event.

We are committed to a minimum period of 6 months, beginning February 15, 2010, when the project opened to volunteers. As always, we tailor our projects and work on the ground to the unique needs of each community and disaster. Since this event and challenge is so large, serious, and we’ve received unprecedented volunteer interest, we have established specific rules and structure for this HODR deployment:

  • We will have a capacity for 100 volunteers at a time and therefore may not be able to accommodate everyone who is interested in volunteering.
  • We will build up to this capacity over the month of February, and we will consider satellite projects later in the deployment, but not initially.
  • We will not be able to accept drop-in volunteers.
  • We will give some priority to:
    • HODR alumni, particularly our Project Gonaives alumni

    • Specific skills we enumerate; at the time licensed structural engineers
  • The volunteer base will have no alcohol, strict curfew and lights out policies, with zero tolerance.

Our efforts will be under open scrutiny from the community, media, donors, and humanitarian world. It is an opportunity to demonstrate the special and direct impact that your volunteer efforts can make on a community in dire need.

Whether you are able to join us on-project or support our efforts with a donation, thank you for your continued engagement and commitment to the unique and effective HODR model and to supporting the people of Haiti following this overwhelming disaster.


David Campbell
Executive Director

Get Involved:

For more information about volunteering on Project Leogane, visit our Haiti Volunteer Page.
To support our efforts with a tax-deductible donation, click here.
Follow our teams on Twitter for daily notes & progress @HODRops

INDONESIA: New Project Photos!

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

If you haven’t been automatically redirected to our Flickr Photo page, please click here. Thank you for your interest & support!





HAITI: Notes from the Field 1/23/10

Monday, January 25th, 2010

An update from David Campbell, HODR Executive Director:

Saturday AM, Jan. 23, 2010 from UN base, Port au Prince

HODR assessment team consists of me (David Campbell), Stefanie Chang & Jeremey Horan. Thanks to Barry Goldsmith, pilot Rick Link and the Ocean Reef Club for your support and assistance with transport to Santo Domingo. We arrived in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic Wednesday January 20 at 2 PM, made it to Jimani, DR at the border by 11 PM, stayed in barracks there.

Found a vehicle, drove to Port au Prince (PAP) Thursday to PAP airport, added Jakob, Gonaives volunteer, to our team, and were picked up by Paul Fermo, with his vehicle. Have slept on the floor at his house in Puits-Bain PAP; neither satellite phone nor satellite internet link working, no cell communications, only email. Roads in horrible condition, and very congested, so a trip to UN base at airport ranges from 30-90 minutes.

Friday attended multiple “cluster meetings”; these are organized by UN OCHA (Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs). Activities are organized into 12 clusters, e.g., health, shelter, logistics, security; a typical meeting is held in a tent at the airport, with about 60 attendees from 40 or so different NGO’s (Non-Governmental Organization, like the World Food Project, Medecins San Frontieres, CARE, HODR, etc…). Information is presented, and requested; there is a tremendous challenge in gathering, integrating, and communication, in addition to the doing and planning.

Yesterday, in addition to the cluster meetings, we met with Habitat for Humanity International, to understand their initial planning thoughts; it is reasonable that we may cooperate on interim housing work if we launch a project. We visited prior contacts at Matthew25, a clinic/guesthouse in PAP, and exchanged information with several connections.

Saturday AM we are attending UN OCHA cluster meetings, listening to press conference, and planning a road trip starting tomorrow to visit affected areas west of PAP, toward Jacmel.

In the Press conference it was mentioned that there have been 12 aftershocks of 4.5 or greater; 2 on Thursday evening; we all slept outside last night due to the warnings. They also reported an estimated death toll of 75,000 – think of the impact of one death in your own life, then realize the impact in a close city of such a traumatic event.

We are focused on specific areas of need we could address with our volunteers, and finding an area where we could be productive and secure.

The damage is massive; entire areas of homes destroyed. There will not be an opportunity for general volunteers, for us or any other organization, for weeks to come. The medical situation seems stabilized.

We will try to keep updates flowing through Twitter @HODRops, and the www.HODR.org website.

Thank you to all the donors and interested volunteers for the support you’ve shown; we are proceeding on plan, and doing our best.

-David

——————-

The team spent 3 days in Port au Prince, over the weekend visited the areas of Leogane and Petit Goave, and is currently en-route to Jacmel as of 1/25/10.
For daily updates follow us on Twitter @HODRops

MEDIA RELEASE:
Important Message for Volunteers in the Immediate Aftermath of Haiti Earthquake

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 13, 2010
For more information please contact:
Beca Howard, Communications Manager
781.570.9412Beca@HODR.org

IN IMMEDIATE AFTERMATH OF TRAGIC EARTHQUAKE, HANDS ON DISASTER RESPONSE SENDS IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO THOSE INTERESTED IN VOLUNTEERING

CARLISLE, MA, USA 1/13/2010 – On Tuesday, January 12, 2010, a massive 7.0 magnitude earthquake followed by a series of strong aftershocks devastated Haiti. Initial reports indicate overwhelming damage in the capital city of Port-au-Prince, affecting an estimated 3 million people with as many as 100,000 lives lost. Hands On Disaster Response (HODR), a US-based 501(c)3 nonprofit, has launched an emergency appeal and assessment in response to the recent earthquake, and has created the Haiti Earthquake Recovery Fund to accept monetary donations to support these efforts. The seasoned volunteer coordination organization welcomes interest from volunteers, but cautions that search and rescue missions are still underway.

“We had an incredibly successful six-month project in Haiti last year, and are anxious to be of assistance again,” says David Campbell, Founder and Executive Director of HODR who plans to return to Haiti as part of the organization’s assessment team. “That being said, we are not a search and rescue or medical response organization. In the immediate aftermath of such a tragic event, we need to let search and rescue efforts do their work before any potential volunteer initiatives can be explored, and I encourage those interested in volunteering to be patient as emergency services take their course.”

The HODR assessment team is reaching out to local networks and agencies in Haiti and plans to arrive in Haiti next week. The organization will be meeting with local officials, visiting affected areas and evaluating the recovery needs in order to determine further involvement and the potential for volunteer projects.

Often, following large-scale natural disasters there is an overwhelming need for able and willing hands to help families pick up the pieces and move forward. HODR harnesses the power of volunteers to bring direct assistance to survivors of natural disasters in the US and around the world. The organization has responded to 13 natural disasters in seven countries, including a deployment in Haiti from October 2008 to March 2009 in response to Hurricane Ike and a series of other hurricanes. Those interested in volunteering, should HODR launch a project in the coming weeks, are encouraged to stay tuned to the organization’s website at www.HODR.org for the latest updates from the assessment team.

HODR programs are tailored to the unique needs of each community and range from debris removal to rebuilding homes and schools. In the organization’s hurricane response project in Haiti, volunteers assisted more than 5,000 families through programs such as “mud removal” (digging homes out from severe mudslides) and well masonry. HODR is actively engaged in a volunteer project in Indonesia in response to the September 2009 earthquakes, focusing on home deconstruction and transitional shelters.

To make a tax-deductible donation to the Haiti Earthquake Recovery Fund in support of HODR’s efforts please visit www.HODR.org/HaitiEarthquake today.

For more information on HODR and how to help, visit the organization’s website at www.HODR.org and follow our team on Twitter @HODRops

For media inquiries, please contact Beca Howard – 781.570.9412, Beca@HODR.org
For donation information, please contact Andrew Kerr – 919.830.3573, Andrew@HODR.org

About Hands On Disaster Response:
Hands On Disaster Response (HODR) is a MA-based, 501(c)3 non-profit organization that provides hands-on assistance to survivors of natural disasters around the world, with maximum impact and minimum bureaucracy. By supporting volunteers with housing, meals, tools, and organized work at no charge HODR is able to provide free and effective response services to communities in need. The organization welcomes both returning volunteers as well as spontaneous volunteers, people not previously affiliated with any disaster organization, but who are willing to help with whatever needs to be done – from clearing rubble to building homes and schools, from sanitation projects to children’s programs. Previous projects include: Indonesia (2009 Earthquakes – On-going project), New York (2009 Flooding), Arkansas (2009 Tornado), Haiti (2008-2009 Hurricanes), Iowa (2008 Flooding), Missouri (2008 Tornado), Arkansas (2008 Tornado), Bangladesh (2007-2008 Cyclone), Peru (2007-2008 Earthquake), Philippines (2006 Typhoon), Indonesia (2006 Earthquake), Mississippi (2005-2006 Hurricane Katrina), and Thailand (2004 Tsunami). For more information or to donate visit www.HODR.org.

HAITI: Earthquake Assessment

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

On Tuesday, January 12, 2010, a massive 7.0 earthquake and dozen aftershocks struck Haiti, near the capital of Port-au-Prince. Initial reports are of overwhelming damage in the capital city, affecting an estimated 3 million people.

HODR has launched an assessment team to determine how and where we can be most effective in the recovery efforts. Search and rescue will be critical over the next weeks, and then the work of helping the country recover will begin. Our team arrived in Haiti January 21. We have been and will continue to network with contacts from our 2008-2009 Haiti hurricane response (Project Gonaives) as well as other responding agencies, and meeting with local officials, visiting affected areas and evaluating the recovery needs in order to determine further involvement and the potential for volunteer projects.

To support our efforts please make a donation to our Haiti Earthquake Response Fund today. If you are interested in volunteering, please read our Volunteer Info page.

We will update www.HODR.org as more information becomes available. You can also follow us on Twitter @HODRops for daily updates and progress.

View our 1/23/10 “Notes from the Field” by clicking here.

For media inquiries, please contact Beca Howard – 781.570.9412, Beca@HODR.org
For donation information, please contact Andrew Kerr – 919.830.3573, Andrew@HODR.org

Thank you for your interest in supporting HODR and the people of Haiti in their time of need.

HAITI EARTHQUAKE: Monitoring the Situation

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

On Tuesday January 12, 2010, a major earthquake of magnitude 7.0 struck Haiti. We are monitoring the situation and reaching out to networks and friends from our 2008-2009 Haiti hurricane response to help us gain local information and perspective.

We will post more information and any HODR updates over the next several days as more details become available. Stay tuned to www.HODR.org for the most current posts, and follow our International Team via Twitter at twitter.com/HODRops

HAITI: Project Gonaives Final Report

Friday, May 1st, 2009

goodbye-header
On 28 March 2009 HODR’s five-and-a-half-month project in Gonaives, Haiti drew to a close. Over the course of this project we expanded our technical skills, built new partnerships, and continued to shape the direction and spirit of this organization. Project Gonaives drew 151 volunteers from 14 nations to join hands and dig in. These volunteers contributed 32142 hours of work and directly benefited 5490 families. We estimate that we indirectly served 15000 families through our partnerships and the technology that we developed and transferred to other organizations. Here is a summary of our last month of work.

Mud Buddies
HODR was the only organized group that worked alongside individuals to clean out their homes. Without any machines, we moved more mud than anyone would have thought humanly possible. A simple task, humble work, but absolutely necessary. We helped people take a first step towards restarting their lives. We even created a mud taxonomy and whether it was marpet, slud, memud, meese, or highly desirable clud, it all ended up out on the street one bucket or one wheel barrow at a time. During our last month, local volunteers led almost all of the work crews, with almost everyone taking a turn at least once. In total, HODR volunteers completed 110 sites, allowing 310 families to return home.

CRS CFW (Catholic Relief Services Cash-for-Work)
Following a successful month-long cash-for-work program collaboration in February, CRS invited us to continue our work on a second program in March. Our team of field coordinators (HODR local alumni volunteers hired by CRS) and David E. assessed, hired, and managed 220 local residents in a cleanup program that re-established road access and drainage canals in the neighborhood of Assifa. This program, benefiting 440 families in total, also capped off months of successful collaboration between CRS and HODR, starting with our assessment back in September 2008. We are proud of our partnership with CRS and the work we did together to help the people of Gonaives.

International Federation of Red Cross (IFRC) Latrine Slabs
This project was a HODR partnership with the IFRC to install 300 latrines in the village of Badjo, a rural community whose sanitation facilities were damaged in the hurricanes and subsequent flooding. HODR volunteers and local residents, lead by Aaron S., poured 330 latrine slabs over two weeks as the first step of a multi-phase project. We also prototyped and made design recommendations for the wood and tin privacy cabin, which sits on top of the slab to complete the latrine. As part of this program, we trained local workers to produce the slabs on their own. The challenges of operating in this rural community was offset by the warm people, beautiful scenery, and tasty food prepared by a local resident.

Well Masonry
In March we continued to implement the contamination-mitigating well masonry that we prototyped with UNICEF. In addition to 40 masonry installations for Oxfam Great Britain and 20 for Action Again Hunger, we closed out this program by installing on 21 wells for the families of our local volunteers. It was with great pride that volunteers worked on the wells of their peers. The skills gained over months of work were on display in our final weeks, as almost all volunteers worked on or led a well crew during this time.

Out with a Bang
In HODR tradition, we closed our project with a party to say thank you and goodbye to our friends. Our local volunteers and staff and their friends and family joined us to reflect on our collective work as well as the friendship and community that grew around us. We had amazing musical performances by creative HODR volunteers – who will ever forget Djemson’s karaoke? Neil, Keely, and Charise also performed a medley in tribute to all of our local volunteers. Kirsty put together a HODR photo slideshow, which was a bit hit. There were clearly two stars up on the screen – the volunteers, and the mud. We capped off the evening with a feast prepared by Norma and dancing to live music.

Giving it Away
The other half of HODR closedown tradition is to give the tools and materials that we’ve accrued to the community that has hosted us and taken care of us. We held a raffle in 3 stages, one each for local volunteers, staff, and then the general community. The grand prize of the raffle was the HODR generator that was won by long-term local volunteer Gilbert. Always fun is the actual give-away day, when the recipients come to our base to carry away their winnings. We saw fans carried away on the knees of motorbike drivers, beds carried away atop heads (the generator left in a wheelbarrow), and smiles, smiles, smiles.

HODR? No… IFRC
Although HODR no longer inhabits the former Hotel Sterling, we are happy to report our base continues to nurture and facilitate productive work. In recognition of the challenges of finding and establishing a base of operation, the IFRC decided to take over our facility upon our exit. We negotiated an agreement and turned over our base to the IFRC, equipping them with basic work tools and household infrastructure to continue their work in the area. IFRC plans to work through August 2009 on shelter and distribution programs, continuing the long and gradual process of recovery.

*****

Project Gonaives was the most collaborative effort to date for the international operations of HODR. It is in part because of these relationships that we (and they) were able to help so many survivors of the 2008 hurricane season. We are thankful for our partnerships with the wonderful people of CRS, UNICEF, Oxfam Intermon, Oxfam Great Britain, IFRC, UN OCHA, OIM, and Action Against Hunger.

We would also like to thank our staff for their steady support throughout our project. Thanks to Jacob for his unflappable guidance and impeccable translation. Thank you Norma, Anata, Oranitte for keeping our bellies full with the best of Haitian cuisine and taking care of us at the base. Thanks to Michelet and Cadem for their watchful presence in our yard. Thanks to Raoul, Noel, Gerard, and Sylvain for keeping our teams moving around town. Finally, thanks to Gedeon for shuttling our volunteers to and from Gonaives.

We owe tremendous thanks to all of our volunteers. An early turning point of Project Gonaives was when a young man, a local resident by the name of Luckner, asked if he could help. He was the first of what would grow to a 30-person local volunteer program, contributing 7112 hours of volunteer service. In the past we actively engaged the beneficiary community to participate in our programs. We have had hundreds of community members do everything from cut down trees to help us build schools, but this time was different. This group of local volunteers worked with us every day, all over the city on all of our projects. Their strength helped us move mountains of mud, their cultural knowledge helped us navigate complex societal norms, and their language skills helped us daily on the worksites. Finally their passion, desire, and drive won our hearts. It was through their efforts that we came to understand and love Haiti. Mesi ampil! We were also joined by 120 foreign volunteers from 14 different countries. It is the energy, creativity, and willingness to help of all our volunteers that moved this project from its beginning to its ultimate success. It is because of you that we exist, it is because of you that people receive help, and it is because of you that we will continue our work.

I’d also like to give a special thanks to John Hancock, Project Gonaives project coordinator who worked with me from assessment to closedown. John’s valuable insight and experience were critical in establishing partnerships, shaping the local volunteer program, and ultimately in ensuring the success of Project Gonaives.

In five and a half months, we shoveled mud , cleaned a school, played games with children, managed distributions, assessed homes, wells, and families, trained NGO staff on GPS, built latrines, and installed well masonry and much, much more. We worked, laughed, ate, hurt, shared, grew, loved, sweated, and when it was over, I cried. Thank you to all of our volunteers, donors, and HODR family for your support throughout Project Gonaives.

Until we meet again,
Stefanie Chang
Project Director
Project Gonaives – Haiti

HAITI: Project Gonaives 90 Day Report

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

pg-90-day-header

After 90 days of the life labou, 118 volunteers (93 international, 25 local) from 14 countries have cycled through the doors of Project Gonaives helping to clear mud, facilitate distributions, organize programs for children, and more. Here is a look at our last 30 days:

Shovel it, Dump it
In three months of work, volunteers have cleared flood wreckage and mud from 66 houses, allowing 94 families to return home. While the government does provide direct support to clear mud from streets and public spaces, residents are responsible to move their mud out to the roads. HODR volunteers work with individual families providing motivation, extra muscle, and hope to small pocket neighborhoods that lay away from the big roads swarming with machines. We remain dedicated to this program for the remaining month and a half of this project.

Stock it, Store it
All 15,000 CRS/UNICEF backpacks have been loaded up and moved on from our facility, after a month and a half of storage. Each backpack is stuffed with a variety of school supplies destined for primary school children in Goniaves. We also helped PSI to load and store 1000 mosquito nets as part of their distribution of materials to rural areas. The heavy bales of nets have now all been moved off of our porch and given to families.

Pump it, Test it
Over the past 3 weeks HODR volunteers have helped Oxfam Intermon (IO) collect water samples from 168 rehabilitated wells. Every morning a team of local and foreign volunteers set off in search of wells that IO has previously cleaned, repaired, and improved. This critical phase includes drawing samples from the wells, keeping them on ice, and transporting them to the government-run water testing lab in the city of Gonaives. In true HODR fashion we actually use a cooler strapped to the back of a bicycle for the transport link!

Plot it, Map it
As CRS rolls in new staff to their office here in Gonaives, they continue to look to HODR for training and support with GPS. Our volunteers expanded our training module and created documentation as well, providing classroom and field training to 6 additional CRS staff.

Pour it, Cure it
We are at work on a project where we will design, build, and install concrete well rings. The goal is to develop the masonry process of prefabricating concrete rings that can then be set in place with appropriate drainage, creating a raised platform that mitigates risk of future flooding while improving the immediate environment around the well (no standing water, thus reduced contamination). This method can then be shared with other NGOs working on water and sanitation to allow them to increase the speed and cost-effectiveness with which they can implement well rehabilitation programs. This project is funded by a grant from UNICEF.

Clean it, Paint it
HODR has completed the exterior painting at École Emmaus, the final step in our rehabilitation work at this school run by the Sisters of St. Joseph of the Apparition. The school is now a point of normalcy in a neighborhood still very much ravaged by the storms. If you look at the MSNBC video you will see a very different place than what exists now. Everything is clean and fresh with students at their desks! Other NGO partners have entered to help with other aspects of the need; ACF cleaned the water well at school and the clinic is set to open this week with a new stock of medicine from CRS. We celebrated the conclusion of our work with a Haitian feast hosted by the sisters who run the school.

Clap it, Sing it
Saturday afternoon games with the children of Ebenezer Camp remains a staple in our schedule. The opportunity to play, connect, and expel our last drop of energy at week’s end is a favorite program of the volunteers. The children know the drill now, and easily run through a wide variety of Haitian songs and games to engage kids of all ages.

***

The efforts of HODR volunteers have attracted attention beyond the NGOs and local government of Gonaives. Marc and Stef were recently interviewed by Project Management Network magazine for HODR’s work in Bangladesh during Project Rayenda (2008). Two photojournalists from NEED Magazine also joined the crew in Gonaives to document volunteer life on deployment. Both stories are scheduled to go to print in February.

With a month and a half of Project Gonaives remaining, there is still time to come and pitch in! Email Tom at info@hodr.org to book your seat on the shuttle today.

Stefanie Chang
Project Director
Project Gonaives