American Red Cross Delivers Critical Supplies to Haiti
Tens of millions
spent or committed for key priorities of food, water and shelter
In an operation that
has involved more emergency response teams than any other single-country
disaster in global Red Cross history, the American Red Cross has so far spent or
committed more than $67 million to meet the most urgent needs of earthquake
survivors in Haiti.
The American Red
Cross is currently focusing on three areas through its emergency responders and
partners:
- Sending food to those in
need, including 3 million pre-packaged meals and funding for World Food
Program efforts that will enable them to feed up to 1 million people for a
month.
- Providing clean drinking
water, including 3.5 million liters distributed to date in 68 settlements.
Each day, the Red Cross is distributing enough water for 100,000 people.
- Distributing shelter items,
such as blankets, tarps, sleeping mats and tents, to families who have been
left homeless.
The Red Cross is
also meeting the health needs of Haitian survivors and providing support to
Haitian families in Haiti and the US. This
includes providing relief supplies, shipment of blood products, family linking
services and providing Red Cross volunteers to the USNS Comfort, which
have been in Haiti for one
week.
To date, 79 percent
of the funds have been committed or spent on food and water; 18 percent on
shelter items; and the remainder on health and family
services.
More than 49 flights
carrying Red Cross aid have arrived in Haiti. Additional planes, ships and
trucks carrying Red Cross humanitarian assistance are en route. For example,
yesterday, 15 trucks of relief supplies arrived from Santo Domingo. A new Red
Cross warehouse with more than 50,000 square feet of capacity is also now
operational in Port-au-Prince, which means that relief
supplies have a safe place to be stored ahead of
distribution.
Although the current
focus is on addressing urgent needs, the American Red Cross is also looking
ahead and applying experience gained after the 2004 Indian
Ocean tsunami. For the past five years, the American Red Cross has
been working with partners in Southeast Asia to
construct water and sanitation systems, provide emotional support and health
care, build shelters, restore livelihoods and prepare communities for the next
disaster. The American Red Cross plans to offer a similar level of support in
close collaboration with Red Cross partners and other international and local
aid organizations in Haiti.
People can donate in
support of the relief effort in Haiti at www.redcross.org or by
calling 1-800-REDCROSS. Mobile donors can text “Haiti” to 90999
to make a $10 contribution. A $10 donation made through mobile giving can
provide a family with two water cans to store clean drinking water, basic first
aid supplies or a blanket appropriate to the
climate.
You can help the
victims of countless crises, like the recent earthquake in Haiti, around the
world each year by making a financial gift to the American Red Cross
International Response Fund, which will provide immediate relief and long-term
support through supplies, technical assistance and other support to help those
in need. The American Red Cross honors donor intent. If you wish to designate
your donation to a specific disaster, please do so at the time of your donation
by mailing your donation with the designation to the American Red Cross, P.O.
Box 37243, Washington, D.C. 20013 or to your local American Red Cross chapter.
Donations to the International Response Fund can be made by phone at
1-800-REDCROSS or 1-800-257-7575 (Spanish) or online at www.redcross.org. About the American Red Cross: The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides
emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies nearly half of the nation's
blood; teaches lifesaving skills; provides international humanitarian aid; and
supports military members and their families. The Red Cross is a charitable
organization — not a government agency — and depends on volunteers and the
generosity of the American public to perform its mission. For more information,
please visit www.redcross.org or join our
blog at http://blog.redcross.org |