• Posted on Friday, October 7, 2011
  • Bookmark and Share
  • email
  • |
  • print
  • |
  • rss

tool name

close
tool goes here

Haiti President Martelly launches housing initiative

Stay Connected

Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Facebook Follow us on your iPhone
Follow us on your Android device Sign up for email newsletters RSS

The first morning Alexandra Simin awoke in the concrete house, the young mother of two cried. Then she laughed uncontrollably.

“There was a time I thought I would never get out of there,” she said. “All I ever had while in there were sleepless nights.”

There was Place St. Pierre, a modestly-clean town square that turned into a makeshift refugee camp after Haiti’s devastating Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake forced more than 1 million people to flee their destroyed or damaged homes in search of shelter.

Almost two years later, the tents and tarps are slowly disappearing.

For weeks, families like Simin’s have quietly moved out of the camp and into permanent homes as part of a housing initiative launched by Haitian President Michel Martelly. With help from the International Organization for Migration, families are getting $500 in rental subsidies. It’s part of a larger program Martelly launched recently to target the town square and five other Port-au-Prince tent cities hoping to find a permanent solution to reconstruction’s most vexing problem: housing.

“We have a plan, we have a vision,” said Patrick Rouzier, the presidential adviser spearheading the housing initiative.

That vision revolves around 30,000 people living in six camps from 16 Port-au-Prince neighborhoods, where more than a half-million people remain in tents. Dubbed 16/6, the $98 million project is being funded by foreign donors who are hoping its success will become the blueprint for reconstructing the country. The plan calls for relocating residents to new homes in rebuilt neighborhoods, while also providing rental subsidies for permanent housing.

“We want to build communities,” Rouzier said. “We may not have solutions for everything, but we are doing concrete projects to implement that vision and we are taking decisions.

“We don’t have the means to rebuild a house for everyone. It’s impossible,” he added.

For now, Rouzier admits that he doesn’t know which of the various financial and housing models will work in Haiti, a country already saddled with land titling issues, substandard housing and a 70 percent unemployment rate even before the quake.

To read the complete article, visit www.miamiherald.com.

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/10/05/v-print/2442531/michel-martelly-launches-housing.html#ixzz1a5m5XJup

JOIN THE DISCUSSION

We welcome comments. To post one, you must sign in using either your McClatchyDC login or your login for Facebook, Twitter or Disqus. Just click the appropriate box below.

Please keep your comment civil, short and to the point. Obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. If you find a comment abusive or inappropriate, please flag it for the moderator by placing your cursor on the comment, then clicking the "flag" link that appears. Thanks for your participation.

BLOG

Mexico Unmasked

Written by Tim Johnson, McClatchy's bureau chief in Mexico City.

BLOG

Inside South America

Written by Jim Wyss, McClatchy's bureau chief in Bogota.

BLOG

China Rises

Written by Tom Lasseter, McClatchy's Beijing bureau chief.

BLOG

Inside Iraq

Written by Iraqi journalists.