Skip to comments.
Salvation Army Continues Massive Relief Operation in Haiti
Salvation Army ^
| January 28, 2010
Posted on 01/31/2010 2:11:23 PM PST by greyfoxx39
Alexandria, VA (January 28, 2010) The Salvation Army is in the midst of its largest international disaster response since the Indian Ocean Tsunami in 2005, providing immediate relief to Haiti following a major earthquake that struck the island on January 12. Teams of international disaster responders from The Salvation Army have joined more than 700 personnel permanently stationed in Haiti to deliver food, water, medicine and other aid supplies to people still suffering more than two weeks after the tragedy. As one of the largest social service organizations in Haiti, this week The Salvation Army was named by the United Nations (UN) as the lead agency responsible for well-being of an estimated 20,000 earthquake survivors. The organization will continue to serve those survivors while coordinating with other agencies and planning its long-term recovery for the country.
The Salvation Army is committed to the people of Haiti for the long term, said Major George Hood, National Community Relations Secretary, based in Alexandria, VA. We are not even at the end of the beginning of this response effort, though we are making great strides to getting help to the point of need.
As a lead agency, The Salvation Army will coordinate the relief efforts of several disaster response organizations for the community surrounding its main compound in the Saint Martin neighborhood in Port au Prince. This includes registering families so that appropriate aid supplies can be efficiently ordered and distributed, providing shelter that meets U.N. approved standards and establishing clean water sources, medical services and other basic necessities.
It is critical that we establish a system with standards and accountability so that all of the dedicated NGOs can work together to quickly deliver the right supplies and services to the people who need them, said Major Hood.
To date, The Salvation Army has distributed more than 350,000 meals, 18,000 gallons of water, hundreds of tents, tarps and flashlights, as well as baby items and medical supplies. Over the last two weeks The Salvation Army worked with the U.N.s World Food Program to distribute the meals. It has also shipped more than 40 tons of aid to the country with the help of Atlanta-based shipping company UPS (NYSE:UPS). The organization has established staging areas in both Miami and Jamaica and is sending almost daily flights to Port au Prince and Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, where supplies were then trucked over-land into Haiti.
In addition, Salvation Army medical teams consisting of doctors, nurses, paramedics and other specialists have now given medical aid to more than 1,500 people. As teams continue to administer medical assistance, the doctors are seeing fewer life-threatening injuries. Medical teams have also delivered a number of babies in the weeks following the earthquake, raising the spirits of Haitians involved.
Also this week, The Salvation Army was able to partially re-open its elementary school at a temporary site on its compound in Port-au-Prince. In addition to daily classes, approximately 100 children aged three to six years will be provided basic nutrition and medical treatment in a secure environment at The Salvation Armys compound.
It is particularly difficult to see how this tragedy is affecting young children in Haiti, said Major Hood. Re-opening a school helps create a normal routine and stability for kids who have gone through so much.
The Salvation Army set up a Haiti relief fund and is accepting monetary donations. Donors may contribute $10 via their phone bill by text messaging the word HAITI to 52000, and confirming the donation with the word, Yes. Donors can also give via www.salvationarmyusa.org, 1-800-SAL-ARMY and through the mail at: The Salvation Army World Service Office, International Disaster Relief Fund, P.O. Box 630728, Baltimore, MD 21263-0728 with designation Haiti Earthquake. To date, more than $8.3 million has been donated to The Salvation Armys relief effort in Haiti.
In Haiti, The Salvation Army operates schools, clinics, a hospital, feeding programs, children's homes and church-related activities through some 60 Corps community centers across the country. One Salvation Army facility, or compound, includes a home for more than 50 children; a school with a daily attendance of 1,500 children; a medical clinic caring for 150-200 people daily; and a church that on any typical Sunday welcomes nearly 1,000 people. The facility is less than 10 minutes from the National Palace and is in an area known as St. Martin that is home to predominantly poor living in the nations capital.
For continued updates, please visit www.blog.salvationarmyusa.org.
TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: charity; christian; christians; earthquake; haiti; haitirelief; salvationarmy
Some groups have left Haiti, but the Salvation Army among others, is in it for the long haul. Also, Samaritans Purse expects to continue relief efforts in Haiti for at least two years.
To: colorcountry; Colofornian; Elsie; FastCoyote; svcw; Zakeet; SkyPilot; rightazrain; ...
2
posted on
01/31/2010 2:12:01 PM PST
by
greyfoxx39
(Carville "Part of the problem is that Mr Obama was refreshingly naive in believing his own rhetoric")
To: greyfoxx39
The Salvation Army is the main one to which I donate. They are the one who does not have excessive administration overhead cost.
3
posted on
01/31/2010 2:17:50 PM PST
by
chiefqc
To: Maigrey
4
posted on
01/31/2010 2:21:47 PM PST
by
willieroe
To: greyfoxx39
Along with Samaritan’s Purse they will be there for years after other groups and celebrities leave.
They do the Lord's work.
5
posted on
01/31/2010 2:22:48 PM PST
by
svcw
(Ellie and Mark come out come out where ever you are.....)
To: greyfoxx39; Dr. Eckleburg
And at Christmas they can’t ring bells outside the stores “because they might offend someone’s delicate sensitibility”. The people behind that movement should slink away like the dirtbags that they are. The Salvation Army, (may God always bless and keep them safe,) just like in Katrina, is there once again, actually getting work done.
6
posted on
01/31/2010 2:25:39 PM PST
by
1000 silverlings
(everything that deceives, also enchants: Plato)
To: chiefqc
The Salvation Army is the main one to which I donate. They are the one who does not have excessive administration overhead cost.Same here.
I have a neighbor who hates them because (according to her) they deny help to anyone who isn't a Christian. But then, she also says that the U.S. Constitution should be set aside (because it's old), we should go to central planning (because it's a different world now), and only the federal government should be involved in charity.
7
posted on
01/31/2010 3:21:39 PM PST
by
snarkpup
("If you can't run anywhere, become stronger than anyone!" - Lt. Cmdr. Lyar von Ertiana)
To: svcw
Samaritans Purse was one of the first to arrive to help in Haiti. I like them too. Have a good team and the people are not looking for self glory. Good place to invest your money...the pay back is knnowing they make a difference.
8
posted on
01/31/2010 3:25:32 PM PST
by
caww
To: greyfoxx39
When a tornado hit the little village I used to live in, many organizations, including the Red Cross and the Salvation Army, were on the scene pretty much immediately, giving valuable aid, but it was the SA who were the last to leave. They kept a small office there for well over a year, dealing with the material and spiritual aftermath, until everyone had the help they needed. It was a place to go for anyone who still had a need.
Theree are a lot of good charities, but SA is my favorite.
To: snarkpup
Wow, honestly how could a person be more wrong than your neighbor. Have you every asked her to back up what she says about the Salvation Army or is she just a lost soul?
10
posted on
01/31/2010 3:48:34 PM PST
by
svcw
(Ellie and Mark come out come out where ever you are.....)
To: caww
not looking for self gloryYou are correct, they work for the Kingdom.
11
posted on
01/31/2010 3:49:40 PM PST
by
svcw
(Ellie and Mark come out come out where ever you are.....)
To: snarkpup
The Salvation Army is my church home and for some seven months, as a volunteer, I ran an inner-city weekend feeding program for the homeless. I can assure your neighbor that no one is ever denied help because of their faith or lack thereof.
What I found to be bizarre was the ACORN people signing up the homeless as Obama voters while we were distributing food. I am reminded of the cynical adage, “No good deed goes unpunished”.
12
posted on
01/31/2010 3:53:01 PM PST
by
Upbeat
To: Upbeat
13
posted on
01/31/2010 4:15:28 PM PST
by
Guenevere
(....)
To: svcw
Wow, honestly how could a person be more wrong than your neighbor. Have you every asked her to back up what she says about the Salvation Army or is she just a lost soul?She says she's a former welfare case worker--presumably government.
14
posted on
01/31/2010 4:32:20 PM PST
by
snarkpup
("If you can't run anywhere, become stronger than anyone!" - Lt. Cmdr. Lyar von Ertiana)
To: snarkpup
What is your neighbor’s name Michelle Obama?
15
posted on
01/31/2010 4:51:32 PM PST
by
chiefqc
To: chiefqc
I have also held them in high esteem, UNTIL I saw them advertising on the ABC Nightly News!
Is THIS where donation dollars go?
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson