Philly Friends Care Damage Reports

Cash is best donation after disaster

Earthquake-devastated Haitians need donations of cash not clothes, food, medicine, or other relief supplies, aid groups say.
Category: General
Posted by: Alicia
Place caption field value here

London, England (CNN) -- Earthquake-devastated Haitians need donations of cash -- not clothes, food, medicine, or other relief supplies, as well intended as they might be, aid groups said Thursday.

Such "in-kind" donations can at best take up valuable space in cargo shipments and waste aid workers' time in sorting through the items, charities said. At worst, the food or medicine could be unusable or even dangerous.

"Sending donated goods oversees is an appealing idea because it makes you feel like you're really helping while at the same time recycling things that are no longer of any use to you," writes former aid worker Saundra Schimmelpfennig in her blog about the impact of aid. "Unfortunately inappropriate donations can do more harm than good and it often costs more to ship used goods than to buy new goods locally."

Schimmelpfennig has worked for the Red Cross and describes herself as a leading expert in the 2004 post-tsunami recovery efforts in Thailand, where she says she saw the impact of aid from the perspectives of donors, villagers and aid workers.

Her blog, "Good Intentions are Not Enough," explains why cash donations are often much better than sending goods to a disaster-stricken area.

In a list of the "Dos and Don'ts of Disaster Donations," Schimmelpfennig explains that "after the tsunami tons of used clothing were donated, much of it inappropriate to the climate and culture." They included winter hats, coats and gloves.

"Donated goods can also clog ports, preventing more immediate relief items from getting through," she writes. "Ports can only hold and process so many goods and often the port authorities have difficulty sorting through everything arriving to get it processed and out the doors."

Many of the items people want to donate -- such as blankets, shoes, food and even medicine -- can be bought locally or regionally, said Florian Westphal of the International Committee of the Red Cross. Doing that cuts down on the cost of transporting the items to the disaster zone, and helps put money into the local economy, he said.

Such is the case in Haiti, said Matt Wingate, a senior emergencies adviser for Save the Children in London. There are parts of the island that were relatively unaffected by the earthquake, and there was virtually no damage in neighboring Dominican Republic.

"Materials that are available locally, either in Haiti or on the island within the Dominican Republic, are better purchased locally because of the very obvious transport cost, which can often dwarf the cost of the materials many times over," Wingate told CNN.

Schimmelpfennig described how, after the Asian tsunami, a group of students shipped donated school supplies to Thailand. It cost more to clear customs and ship the items to the affected area than it would have cost to buy them at the local marketplace, she said.

Donations of goods can sometimes waste valuable time on the ground. After Hurricane Mitch hit Central America in 1998, 15 pallets of "random medicine" was sent to the region, but "critical time was wasted sorting through the medicine and throwing three-quarters of it away," Schimmelpfennig said.

More at: http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/01/21/haiti.best.donations/index.html

Sample News feed