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Archive for February, 2010

One5 Foundation is Nimble and Delivers the Aid You Intend

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Everyone wants to help Haiti in its desperate time of need. But how do you know that the money you donate actually helps put food in someone’s mouth or provides medical care?

Many people naturally prefer to donate to large well-known relief agencies such as the Red Cross or UNICEF because they have a track record of responding to large crises, such as the Haiti earthquake. Yet, the very nature of the earthquake devastation in Port au Prince often can put the big players at a disadvantage.

Don’t be afraid to donate to a smaller non-government organization such as the One5 Foundation. We have a great deal of experience in Haiti already.

The big organizations such as the Red Cross and UNICEF rely on a massive infrastructure to get the supplies they need. They traditionally ship goods in big containers. However, the port facilities in Port au Prince were destroyed in the earthquake, so unloading supplies is a big problem. Similarly, they transport the goods in large trucks, which have been impeded by the destruction that has made many of the roads and streets impassible.

In contrast, the One5 Foundation uses a Toyota pickup truck to get around. We are able to drive to the Dominican Republic to obtain supplies and make a haul on the same day. We had food and water in the hands of people the day after the earthquake, when the big organizations couldn’t deliver it within a week.

We can promise you that your donation will have the effect that you intend.

When large quasi-political groups interact, the established bureaucracies run up against each other to the detriment of the people who desperately need aid. We’ve seen it over and over again in Haiti already. While, of course they mean well, the administrators on the ground are often young and inexperienced. They spend too much time “coordinating,” and that’s the problem. In the time they are talking you could get food and water to some people anyway. They need a “disaster czar” to tell everyone what they are expected to do.

Meanwhile, One5 Foundation volunteers will continue to drive that little pickup truck and get things done for as many people as we can.  Your donation will indeed have an impact.

One Five Foundation Has Real Impact in Haiti Crisis

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Over the last month since the massive earthquake, everyone associated with the One Five Foundation has been consumed with the logistics of getting aid to Haiti.

Because One Five already had a presence in Haiti prior to the earthquake there was never any question that we needed to rise to the occasion and provide assistance on the ground in any way we could.

In a leap of blind faith, Brad Gautney our Haiti team leader, jumped into action as soon as he learned of the catastrophe. Brad led a medical mission to Haiti and was in-country within a couple of days of the quake, traveling overland from the Dominican Republic. The team was able to get into Port au Prince and started to work in a hospital there. They encountered a chaotic situation and began impose organization. Because of their effectiveness, Team One-Five was asked to take over the management at that community hospital on an ongoing basis.

Brad and David Miller, chairman of the One Five Foundation, were on the scene with team members managing the hospital where volunteer medical teams from all over the world were working. They performed incredibly well in the face of the worst crisis anyone had ever experienced. They assisted a large number of patients every day, stabilizing people with broken limbs, dressing wounds and administering antibiotics. When they ran out of space in the building they set up large tents outside and continued their good work. On numerous times, our people were told that it was the best-run hospital in Port au Prince.

Our team could not have performed at the high level that they did without the support of the Nueterra employees and One Five volunteers who staffed the Haiti war room at the Nueterra offices. Mary Beth Jackson, our One Five Foundation administrator, and her volunteers did a phenomenal job of organizing the entire effort and obtained donations of medical supplies from our partners around the country. The One Five Foundation sent more than one million dollars worth of medical supplies to Haiti.

Other volunteer teams to Haiti had to turn around and come home because they didn’t have the logistical support at home. Our foundation has proved it can have a real impact and is nimble enough to find ways to help when others cannot.

The One Five Foundation is in Haiti now and will be in the future.