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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
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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
With your support we’ve made a direct and lasting impact on families affected by disaster. From well masonry in Haiti to tree removal in Arkansas, from county-wide recovery coordination in New York to home deconstruction and transitional shelters in Indonesia, we couldn’t have done it without the generosity of the amazing volunteers and donors who support our disaster response efforts.
Learn more about the projects of 2009, and get involved today by volunteering on our current project in Indonesia or by making a tax-deductible donation to support our work in 2010 and beyond.
Cheers to the success of 2009 and another great year ahead with your involvement and support!
Happy New Year!
Five years ago the Southeast Asian tsunami struck, triggered by a 9.0 earthquake, one of the largest in history. The level of devastation shocked the world and motivated many, including HODR’s founder and Executive Director David Campbell, to do something to help those in desperate need. David traveled to Thailand, encountered many other individuals who had similarly showed up with a pure desire to help, and Hands On Disaster Response was born.
Click here to listen to an interview with HODR’s Executive Director David Campbell on New Hampshire Public Radio’s ‘Word of Mouth’ program about what he encountered in Thailand back in 2005 and what HODR’s been up to since. December 24, 2009.