Americans and concerned observers worldwide watched Haiti tremble after a
magnitude 7.0 earthquake Tuesday evening, and many immediately asked:
How can I help?
Relief organizations largely say that right
now, money donations are
needed more than additional aid volunteers.
“It’s a bit of a tough
one for impromptu volunteers to enter into the fold,” says Richard
Muffley, spokesman for the Center for International Disaster Information
(CIDI) in Washington. Unsolicited volunteers may not have the needed
training from aid organizations and will still need to be fed and housed
once in a disaster zone, he says. “Cash is truly the most economical
and efficient way of making a contribution.”
But Mr. Muffley and
other aid organizations also say there are still opportunities to be
hands-on with Haiti earthquake relief – which, they note, will continue
long after the shock the quake triggered this week.
How you can volunteer
now
For medical workers, the International Medical Corps is still
open.
“We are taking applications for volunteer doctors and
nurses, but we have a particular need for nurses,” says Crystal Wells,
the group’s communications officer in Chicago. Applicants can fill out
their information on the "Work with Us" tab of their website.
Both medical and non-medical workers can register their offer of
services with the CIDI on their website: http://www.cidi.org/default.htm.
Aid agencies browse the listings and call on those whose services match
their needs.
Muffley adds that hands-on events outside of Haiti,
like baked goods and yard sales, can generate much-needed donations.
The
Red Cross is not accepting volunteers to travel to Haiti now, but both
they and the International Medical Corps say that later, they may need
volunteer health-care personnel. “Down the road, [Haiti will need] more
medical people, translators, things like that,” says Nadia Pontif of the
American Red Cross. She encourages interested volunteers to contact
their local Red Cross chapter to get the appropriate disaster training
now.
Social-media
volunteering
Aid staffers emphasized the role that social media
are playing in Haiti relief, to solicit donations, help Haitian families
get information about their relatives, and follow the island’s news.
The
Red Cross has set up a Family Links database here for relatives to find their Haitian family
after the quake. Since yesterday, 14,000 people have registered on the
site and more than 1,000 people in Haiti have written to the Red Cross
to say that they are alive, says Anna Nelson, a spokeswoman in Geneva.
“Even
if [someone who wants to help] doesn’t know any Haitians, they can put
this on their Facebook” and let friends know to pass along the database,
Ms. Nelson adds.
Ms. Wells of the International Medical Corps
says they’re looking for social-media volunteers to monitor their
website, which they continuously update to show which donations they
need at a given time and who is needed on the ground.
“That’s kind
of a different way to volunteer that does make a big impact,” Wells
adds.
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