Photos from Rob Olshansky–recovery & rebuilding

March 18, 2010 by admin  
Filed under General Information

Photos from social science team (Etienne, Green, Miles, Olshansky)

Photos from Rob Olshansky–societal impacts

March 17, 2010 by admin  
Filed under General Information, Reports From The Field

Photos from social science and recovery team (Etienne, Green, Miles, Olshansky):

Photos from Anna Lang–unengineered construction

March 17, 2010 by admin  
Filed under General Information, Structural

A set of images showing low-rise, un-engineered construction:

Photos by Amanda Lewis

March 13, 2010 by admin  
Filed under General Information

Photos by Peter Coats

March 13, 2010 by admin  
Filed under EERI Activities, General Information

These are photos taken by Peter Coats.

Photos by Ayhan Irfanoglu

March 9, 2010 by admin  
Filed under General Information

NGOs and recovery planning

March 5, 2010 by Rebekah Green  
Filed under General Information

Recovery planning in Haiti seems to be happening on multiple, rather independent planes.  Over the last two days, we have spoken with a range of organizations grappling with recovery strategies.  On Wednesday we assessed a series of church complexes and discussed recovery strategies with their development and aid specialists. I also read through the UN’s shelter cluster meeting notes and planning documents. Today, I went to a small networking meeting of small and independent non-profit organizations.

The cluster group has laid out a systematic and targeted plan for relief distribution, camp management, procurement of of temporary shelters, and many other issues. Reporting is standardized  so that the large humanitarian relief agencies can coordinate their responses using online geographic-based reporting. Much of their strategies are grounded in policies based upon past experience in managing large disaster recovery efforts.

The church aid and development specialist indicated a much more incoherent picture in the field. They noted that there were often multiple and conflicting “community leaders” in camps and it was difficult to determine who was represented. Further, non-profits would compete to be prominent in providing high profile relief, leading to overlaps and gaps and a very murky picture of what services were being provided where, and to what percentage of a camp’s population.  They had attended UN Shelter cluster meetings, but being smaller than the major international aid agencies, they did not have staff to devote to the almost continuous UN cluster meetings. As such, they were not integral to the decision making process.

Today, at the networking event for small non-profits, I spoke with several individuals that represented organizations of volunteers or staff of one to two people. Some of these groups had been working in Haiti on education, orphanages, and general development when the earthquake struck. Without the benefit of past experience, they moved into disaster relief and were now contemplating how to support communities in redevelopment. These individuals were for the most past, unaware of the UN coordination system and strategies already being made. Some were equally unaware of the lessons learned from past disasters. They seemed destine to have to learn through failure, or at best, by independently developing public education materials, housing designs, and distribution processes that already exist.

Recent photos from the field

March 4, 2010 by admin  
Filed under EERI Activities

All photos by Ayhan Irfanoglu

Social impact themes – Shelter and livelihoods

March 4, 2010 by smiles  
Filed under General Information

Didn’t have time to post yesterday because of a dinner with Oxfam GB and UN Habitat. Alas the internet hasn’t been good enough to post more pics on Flickr either. So I decided to give a short photo post of the social impacts team’s (Harley Etienne, Rebekah Green, Scott Miles, and Rob Olshansky) two primary themes  — shelter and livelihoods — in four photos.

SHELTER

Damage and fear of aftershocks (or another large earthquake) has displaced over 1 million Haitians from their home.

Bourdon bioville (hillside slum) residential damage.

This has resulted in about 315 IDP camps in Haiti sheltering 7-800,000 people.

National soccer stadium IDP camp (there are many more tents outside the stadium).

LIVELIHOODS

Haiti is a mix of life-in-progress and disaster recovery. Commerce is still happening, often as if nothing has happened. Of course the economic landscape has change temporarily and permanently as Haiti starts the long recovery process.

Street vendors selling while workers conduct primary first phase goal of debris removal -- clearing drainage ditches.

Some means of livelihoods create a symbiosis; for example, salvagers remove steel from debris for selling, which simplifies debris removal for owners.

A "freelance" worker salvaging steel from the Holy Trinity Primary School debris, likely to sell it on the street.

First full day – some observations

March 2, 2010 by Rebekah Green  
Filed under General Information

Scott posted the strategy of the social impacts team. One of the lasting impressions I have from speaking to vendors and IDP camp residents is the still critical need for basic relief supplies: food, water, medical supplies and larger tents to replace the schools, church, and hospital facilities. While these needs are evident, many people first spoke about the need for jobs. Everywhere we went, people were looking for jobs of any kind. Even the venders who sat on the street said they only came because there was nothing else to do and nowhere else to go. They had few customers. The is a heavy sense of everyone waiting and waiting, but for no one could really articulate for what.

In the afternoon, two members of the team also spoke with a Bishop of one of the country’s major religious organizations. Most of the country’s social services are provided through church complexes – schools, clinics, nutrition sites, feeding sites, cultural activities, and services for marginalized community members. The high percentage of church properties that experienced collapsed or heavily damage, certainly well over half in the Port-au-Prince area, will have significant and long-lasting impacts beyond church parishioners.

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