PADF’s Homes for the Holidays for Haiti seeks donations to repair damaged homes
Washington,
D.C.-With more than 1.3 million Haitians
still living in
displacement camps, the Pan American
Development Foundation has
launched a campaign to collect donations to
help repair damaged homes.
www.ImUnitedforHaiti.org
The innovative
campaign-called Homes for
the Holidays for Haiti-seeks contributions so
displaced families can
leave the unsafe and unsanitary displacement
camps for dwelling that
have been inspected and repaired by
professionals.
“Too many families continue to live
under bed sheets and pieces of plastic in
Haiti,” says John
Sanbrailo, PADF’s Executive Director. “It is
unimaginable that our
neighbors should live like this when we can
repair their damaged
homes.”
Too poor to repair the
homes and unable to find stable work, more than
1.3 million sought
refuge in these temporary camps after the
devastating Jan. 12
earthquake.
“We created Homes for the
Holidays for Haiti so
individuals can make a difference by repairing
these homes,” says
Sanbrailo. “Donations of $25 or more will add
up to helping our most
disadvantaged neighbors. $100 can rebuild a
wall and $1,000 can repair
a home. It is fast and safe to donate on our
special website www.ImUnitedforHaiti.org.”
PADF,
U.S.-based Miyamoto International and the
Haitian government trained
270 structural engineers who inspected the
conditions of more than
382,000 buildings in the capital of
Port-au-Prince. Based on U.S.
standards, buildings were “tagged” based on
their condition. A
green tag is safe; a yellow tag means it needs
repair (and those fixes
are described); and a red tag is unsafe. More
than 99,000 buildings
were yellow tagged. Repairing these houses
would allow 800,000 people
to return home.
PADF has begun the
repair process. We have
trained local masons and contractors to do the
work and engineers to
supervise it.The contributions raised through
this campaign will help
more families to return home.
“We often
think of gifts that
last beyond the holidays. This is one of those
gifts,” says
Sanbrailo. “Please visit I’m United for Haiti
and contribute to
our Homes for the Holidays for Haiti
campaign.”
About PADF
The Pan
American
Development Foundation (PADF) is a non-profit
organization established
in 1962 to promote, facilitate, and implement
social and economic
development in Latin America and the Caribbean.
In the past year, its
work reached 10.2 million people in 22
countries. www.padf.org
In Haiti, PADF manages a
large portfolio of activities ranging from
community-driven
development, assessing and repairing homes,
protecting human rights
and natural disaster prevention. PADF’s home
assessment initiative
is funded by U.S. Agency for International
Development’s Office of
Foreign Disaster Assistance. For more
information on PADF’s
activities in Haiti, please visit: www.ImUnitedforHaiti.org
In addition to Haiti, PADF has
offices in Colombia, the
Dominican Republic and Venezuela. PADF is based
in Washington, D.C. www.padf.org
For
more information,
please contact:
Michael J.
Zamba
Senior Director of
Communications
Pan American Development
Foundation
1889 F
Street, NW
Second Floor
Washington, D.C.
20006
Tel. (202)
458-3969
www.padf.org
