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Monday, 25 April 2016
When disaster relief brings anything but relief
When disaster relief brings anything but relief
Many of the well-meaning articles we Americans donate in
times of disaster turn out to be of no use to those in need. Sometimes,
they even get in the way. That's a message relief organizations very
much want us to heed. Our Cover Story is reported now by Scott Simon of
NPR:
When Nature grows savage and angry, Americans get generous and kind. That's admirable. It might also be a problem.
"Generally
after a disaster, people with loving intentions donate things that
cannot be used in a disaster response, and in fact may actually be
harmful," said Juanita Rilling, director of the Center for International
Disaster Information in Washington, D.C. "And they have no idea that
they're doing it."
Rilling has spent more than a decade trying to tell well-meaning people to think before they give.
In 1998 Hurricane Mitch struck Honduras. More than 11,000 people died. More than a million and a half were left homeless.
And
Rilling got a wake-up call: "Got a call from one of our logistics
experts who said that a plane full of supplies could not land, because
there was clothing on the runway. It's in boxes and bales. It takes up
yards of space. It can't be moved.' 'Whose clothing is it?' He said,
'Well, I don't know whose it is, but there's a high-heeled shoe, just
one, and a bale of winter coats.' And I thought, winter coats? It's
summer in Honduras."
Humanitarian workers call the crush of useless, often incomprehensible contributions "the second disaster."
In 2004, following the Indian Ocean tsunami, a beach in Indonesia was piled with used clothing.
There was no time for disaster workers to sort and clean old clothes. So the contributions just sat and rotted.
"This
very quickly went toxic and had to be destroyed," said Rilling. "And
local officials poured gasoline on it and set it on fire. And then it
was out to sea."
Tons of donated clothing on the beach at Banda Aceh, Indonesia.
USAID/OFDA
"So, rather than clothing somebody, it went up in flames?" asked Simon.
"Correct.
The thinking is that these people have lost everything, so they must
NEED everything. So people SEND everything. You know, any donation is
crazy if it's not needed. People have donated prom gowns and wigs and
tiger costumes and pumpkins, and frostbite cream to Rwanda, and used
teabags, 'cause you can always get another cup of tea."
You may
not think that sending bottles of water to devastated people seems
crazy. But Rilling points out, "This water, it's about 100,000 liters,
will provide drinking water for 40,000 people for one day. This amount
of water to send from the United States, say, to West Africa -- and
people did this -- costs about $300,000. But relief organizations with
portable water purification units can produce the same amount, a 100,000
liters of water, for about $300."
And then there were
warm-hearted American women who wanted to send their breast milk to
nursing mothers in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake.
"It sounds
wonderful, but in the midst of a crisis it's actually one of the most
challenging things," said Rebecca Gustafson, a humanitarian aid expert
who has worked on the ground after many disasters.
"Breast milk
doesn't stay fresh for very long. And the challenge is, what happens if
you do give it to an infant who then gets sick?"
December 2012,
Newtown, Connecticut: A gunman killed 20 children and six adults at
Sandy Hook Elementary School. Almost instantaneously, stuff start
arriving.
Tens
of thousands of stuffed animals, donated to the children of Newtown,
Conn., following the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, fill a
warehouse. Most donations were sent away.
Chris Kelsey
Chris Kelsey, who worked for Newtown at the time, said they had to get a warehouse to hold all the teddy bears.
Simon asked, "Was there a need for teddy bears?"
"I
think it was a nice gesture," Kelsey replied. "There was a need to do
something for the kids. There was a need to make people feel better. I
think the wave of stuff we got was a little overwhelming in the end."
And
how many teddy bear came to Newtown? "I think it was about 67,000,"
Kelsey said. "Wasn't limited to teddy bears. There was also thousands of
boxes of school supplies, and thousands of boxes of toys, bicycles,
sleds, clothes."
Newtown had been struck by mass murder, not a
tsunami. As Kelsey said, "I think a lot of the stuff that came into the
warehouse was more for the people that sent it, than it was for the
people in Newtown. At least, that's the way it felt at the end."
Every child in Newtown got a few bears. The rest had to be sent away, along with the bikes and blankets.
There
are times when giving things works. More than 650,000 homes were
destroyed or damaged in Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Thousands of people
lost everything.
Donated clothing on a basketball court following Hurricane Sandy, in the Bronx, N.Y.
HelpAfterSandy.org
Tammy Shapiro is one of the organizers of Occupy Sandy, which grew out of the Occupy Wall Street movement.
"We were able to respond in a way that the big, bureaucratic agencies can't," Shapiro said.
When the hurricane struck, they had a network of activists, connected and waiting.
"Very quickly, we just stopped taking clothes," Shapiro said. Instead, they created a "relief supply wedding registry."
"We
put the items that we needed donated on that registry," said Shapiro.
"And then people who wanted to donate could buy the items that were
needed. I mean, a lot of what we had on the wedding registry was
diapers. They needed flashlights."
Simon asked, "How transportable is your experience here, following Hurricane Sandy?"
"For
me, the network is key. Who has the knowledge? Where are spaces that
goods can live if there's a disaster? Who's really well-connected on
their blocks?"
Juanita Rilling's album of disaster images shows
shot after shot of good intentions just spoiling in warehouses, or
rotting on the landscape.
"It is heartbreaking," Rilling said.
"It's heartbreaking for the donor, it's heartbreaking for the relief
organizations, and it's heartbreaking for survivors. This is why cash
donations are so much more effective. They buy exactly what people need,
when they need it.
"And cash donations enable relief
organizations to purchase supplies locally, which ensures that they're
fresh and familiar to survivors, purchased in just the right quantities,
and delivered quickly. And those local purchases support the local
merchants, which strengthens the local economy for the long run."
Disaster
response worker Rebecca Gustafson says that most people want to donate
something that is theirs: "Money sometimes doesn't feel personal enough
for people. They don't feel enough of their heart and soul is in that
donation, that check that they would send.
"The reality is, it's one of the most compassionate things that people can do."
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