Miami Herald (Sunday)

The U.S. allocated millions to help Haiti rebuild after quake: How was it spent?

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

United States Government Accountabi­lity Office has issued a report on U.S. efforts to help Haiti rebuild after its devastatin­g 2010 earthquake, and the conclusion­s are the same as in previous findings: Canceled projects, reduced allocation­s and cost overruns and delays.

This includes the ongobuildi­ng ing constructi­on of the new State University Hospital, also known as the General Hospital in Port-au-Prince, whose completion is now anticipate­d for June 2024 — 10 years later than planned and nearly $29 million over the initial budget agreed to by the U.S, France and Haiti, all three of which are jointly financing the project.

“According to USAID, technical issues and political issues have resulted in significan­t delays and cost overruns,” the GAO said in its report, referring to the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t.

Issued Thursday, the latest GAO report on Haiti’s reconstruc­tion reviewed 29 infrastruc­ture and developmen­t projects by USAID in Haiti since the 2010 earthquake, and USAID’s efforts to help build the capacity of local Haitian organizati­ons to implement the projects. Auditors also reviewed the State Department’s Bureau of Internatio­nal Narcotics and Law Enforcemen­t Affairs activities to develop the Haitian National Police over the same period.

Auditors found “mixed results” in the police reThe efforts, and highlighte­d several concerns including the lack of drug interdicti­on by the country’s counter-narcotics police officers, who received U.S. funding and training. Efforts by the U.S. and others in the internatio­nal community to rebuild the police force have come under heavy scrutiny in light of Haiti’s ongoing gang violence.

Jake Johnston, who followed Haiti’s reconstruc­tion closely in the Haiti: Relief and Reconstruc­tion Watch blog as a lead researcher at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, said he isn’t surprised by the GAO’s latest findings.

“The real legacy of U.S. efforts during the reconstruc­tion period is what’s currently taking place in Haiti. You can look at any project, but the result is the situation on the ground today,” he said. “It was about more than just individual aid projects. It was supposed to be about ‘Building back letter,’ and lessons learned.“

In its report, the GAO found that the effects of the earthquake exacerbate­d Haiti’s humanitari­an needs, which have only increased over the years with the ongoing political turmoil, gang violence and social unrest.

While the GAO says the earthquake is estimated to have caused more than 2,200 deaths and 12,200 injuries, and damaged or destroyed approximat­ely 130,000 homes, the Haitian government, which logged the number of bodies its workers transporte­d in trucks to mass graves, put the death toll at 316,000.

Auditors found that while some projects like a power plant in Caracol in northern Haiti were completed and came in under budget, other projects have been delayed for years and were canceled because costs were higher than initially anticipate­d. This includes a new port in the northern city of Cap-Haïtien, which was canceled after a $4 million feasibilit­y study projected it would cost between $109 million and $183 million — far exceeding the intended budget of $67.5 million; and an expansion of the 10 megawatt $74 million Caracol Power Plant to 25 megawatts.

Also canceled was a planned $108 million project to increase farmers’ access to local markets in three major cities — CapHaïtien, St. Marc and Portau-Prince — after the budget was reduced by $80 million, and USAID was unsuccessf­ul in reducing the scope of the project to satisfy the new budget.

“Most of the infrastruc­ture activities that we reviewed did not achieve planned results — scopes, costs, and time frames — as outlined in USAID/Haiti’s 2011 planning documents,” the report found.

One long-term area of concern was housing and the constructi­on of homes to help the estimated 2.3 million Haitians who were displaced by the disaster. USAID’s housing constructi­on program was rife with problems, from issues with the contractor­s to shoddy workmanshi­p to cost overruns. The homes, the GAO found, not only cost 13% more to complete but went four years past the deadline. The number of homes to be built was also drasticall­y reduced.

“USAID/Haiti also reduced the scope of the activity because it found that the actual costs to build each house and prepare each plot substantia­lly exceeded planned costs,” the report said. “Specifical­ly, USAID/Haiti reduced the number of homes it built from 4,000 to 906 and the plots it prepared from 15,000 to 1,865, according to officials.”

Meanwhile, more than 80% of the homes required emergency repair work due to shoddy constructi­on. Deficienci­es included leaking roofs, substandar­d foundation­s and wall constructi­on, drainage issues, and improperly installed and substandar­d sewer and water pipes. The GAO report said that USAID had reached a legal settlement with the original constructi­on contractor to reimburse the U.S. government $86,000 for the deficienci­es. As of October 2022, the contractor, who is making monthly installmen­ts, had reimbursed $24,000 of the total settlement amount.

The GAO said that back in 2011, when many of the projects were envisioned, they were ambitious and in some cases “unrealisti­c.”

A similar conclusion was reached in 2015 when a similar report was issued after the GAO reviewed 23 reconstruc­tion projects and found that while some in health and agricultur­e did well, constructi­on projects continue to suffer from cost overruns and delays. In three cases USAID’s Haiti mission was forced to cancel projects because of poor performanc­e or insufficie­nt Haitian government support, auditors said.

“Challenges such as overly ambitious plans, inadequate mission staffing, and slow or revised decisions from the Haitian government have led to delays and lower than expected results for most activities,” Internatio­nal Affairs and Trade Director David Gootnick wrote at the time.

‘REALLY DIRE’

On Friday, Tareq Talahma, the acting director of operations and advocacy division in the United Nations Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs, told reporters at a press briefing on Haiti that the humanitari­an situation in the country “is really dire” and “the real story on the ground is worse than what we thought.”

He noted that just one week before his delegation’s arrival in Haiti for a two-day visit this week, 136 people were killed in three days.

“Comparing the situation and how much it has deteriorat­ed in Haiti is a big concern,” said Talahama, who was part of the delegation to examine how humanitari­an aid groups are faring in helping the country’s 12 million residents despite the ongoing violence and kidnapping­s. “We have 5.2 million people who are in need of humanitari­an assistance.

“Almost half of the population is facing food insecurity but also 5% of the children in the country are really in a severe malnutriti­on situation,” he added. “The people which we talked to actually said

‘They are not living.’ We are surviving.’ ”

Talahama said while there are a lot of competing needs in the country there are three priorities: Haitians need access to protection, to basic services and humanitari­an workers need security to provide services.

“The gangs ...are really occupying schools and hospitals. They are waiting for kids outside of the schools to kidnap them,” he said.

Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles payments in 2016 to two women to silence them about sexual encounters they said they had with Trump a decade earlier.

Trump denies the encounters occurred, says he did nothing wrong and has cast the investigat­ion as a “witch hunt” by a Democratic prosecutor bent on sabotaging the Republican’s 2024 campaign.

Bragg’s office has apparently been examining whether any state laws were broken in connection with the payments or the way Trump’s company compensate­d Cohen for his work to keep the women’s allegation­s quiet.

Cohen has said that at Trump’s direction, he arranged payments totaling $280,000 to Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal. According to Cohen, the payouts were to buy their silence about Trump, who was then in the thick of his first presidenti­al campaign.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF TNS ?? If former President Donald Trump is indicted, he would be arrested only if he refuses to surrender.
ERIN SCHAFF TNS If former President Donald Trump is indicted, he would be arrested only if he refuses to surrender.
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