Earthquake Reconstruction: Another look at progress

January 25, 2012

Wawa and Kristen Chege reflect on the international response to the Haiti earthquake and the need for transparency in reconstruction efforts in the latest Third Way Cafe.

In this chaos of reconstruction, with an influx of aid money and the pressure to spend quickly, international companies have instead found an opportune time to push Haiti down the path of industrialization. Investors have reframed their factories as opportunities for development, and in the process secured significant funding from USAID and international financial institutions.

Read the article here.


Keep Haiti in Your Hearts and Take Action

May 10, 2010

Neighborhood residents line up their buckets at an MCC supported water distribution site in Cité Soliel. Port Au Prince, Haiti. Ben Depp/MCC

Theo Sitther writes about Haiti, four months after the earthquake, for Third Way Cafe:

Almost four months have passed since the earthquake in Haiti. In the weeks that followed, Haiti captured the headlines and gripped our hearts. Many of us responded in prayer and generous giving.

Haiti is no longer on the front pages but the need is just as desperate. With more than 230,000 people killed, 300,000 people injured, and at least 1.7 million forced from their homes, Haiti will require ongoing support throughout 2010 and beyond to address emergency needs in health, nutrition, shelter, sanitation and rural livelihood. The rainy season has already started and hurricane season will soon start in June; this desperate situation will only be exacerbated in the coming months.

On March 24, President Obama sent his request to Congress for a supplemental spending bill to support relief and reconstruction efforts in Haiti for the remainder of 2010. Given the extent of the devastation and more than three million people affected, it is vital that Congress votes to support this funding. But Congress is moving slowly.

Click here to read the rest of the article.


Quote from Haiti

January 19, 2010

We all need to make sure that we’re not criminalizing or demonizing the victims of this tragedy. People will do what it takes to be able to feed their families and when they’re truly desperate, those actions might become violent. However, that doesn’t make them any less human or any less deserving of our sympathy and aid….we’ve seen an astounding amount of love and solidarity in the aftermath of the earthquake.

- Alexis Erkert (MCC worker in Haiti)

Check out Ben and Alexis’ blog for updates from Haiti.


Haiti Needs Temporary Protected Status

January 14, 2010

Ben Depp/MCC

President Obama in a speech on Wednesday morning said, “Let me just say that this is a time when we are reminded of the common humanity that we all share. With just a few hundred miles of ocean between us and a long history that binds us together, Haitians are neighbors of the Americas and here at home.  So we have to be there for them in their hour of need.”

In addition to emergency relief efforts, the U.S. government can take another important step to help the Haitian people in their “hour of need.” The Obama administration can immediately grant Temporary Protected Status (TPS) to Haitians already in the United States.  TPS would allow immigrants who are unable to safely return to their home country – because of ongoing conflict, natural disaster or other extraordinary conditions – to extend their stay in the United States on a temporary basis.

In 2008, tropical storm Gustav and hurricanes Hanna and Ike caused more than $1 billion in damages in Haiti – the equivalent of 15% of the country’s GDP – destroying crops, washing out roads and bridges and killing an estimated 800 people. According to USAID, approximately 35,000-40,000 people were left homeless and over 100,000 homes were damaged or destroyed. Haiti has still not recovered from these storms and the earthquake just compounds the problem.

Temporary Protected Status for Haitian immigrants already living in the United States will help in the recovery effort. There are an estimated 30,000 Haitians in the U.S. facing the threat of deportation. TPS status would allow them to apply for temporary work authorization and the money they send home would assist in Haiti’s recovery.

Send a letter to President Obama and urge him to immediately grant TPS for Haiti.


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