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23222: (Hermantin)Miami-Herald-Miami-Dade leaders call for contributions (fwd)
From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>
Posted on Wed, Sep. 22, 2004
HAITI RELIEF
Miami-Dade leaders call for contributions
As the storm toll mounted in the Caribbean, Miami-Dade leaders hoped to lead
by example with financial help.
BY TRENTON DANIEL AND TERE FIGUERAS
tdaniel@herald.com
Jacotte Previlus had parked herself next to her TV, radio and telephone
since Saturday, when relatives in the Haitian city of Gonaives told her
floodwaters were creeping under their doorstep.
A torrential downpour fed by Tropical Storm Jeanne followed, the phone lines
fell and all communication was lost.
''It's very stressful and painful,'' Previlus said Tuesday, still not
knowing about the well-being of her family and friends in Haiti. ''You're by
the radio, you're by the phone, and everybody lives by the TV.''
Today, the Miramar resident, her mother and aunt leave for Port-au-Prince,
and then take a bus as far as flooded roads will allow, to Gonaives, the
northern port city devastated by Jeanne.
As the death toll neared 700 on Tuesday, Miami-Dade County and Haitian
leaders appealed to residents to contribute to relief efforts not only for
Haiti but its suffering Caribbean neighbors.
The county led the way with more than $90,000 from commissioners' office
budgets.
Commission Chairwoman Barbara Carey-Shuler donated $10,000, and most of the
commissioners were ready to donate funds from their budgets, including
$10,000 each from commissioners Katy Sorenson, Dennis Moss, Sally Heyman,
Jose ''Pepe'' Diaz, Dorrin Rolle, Rebeca Sosa and Javier Soto.
Libraries and fire stations will collect battery-operated radios, batteries,
canned food, diapers, dry milk, candles, blankets, first-aid supplies,
flashlights, water and matches. Commissioner Joe Martinez -- who helped
organize a flotilla of private boats to deliver donated goods to the Bahamas
last week -- said several companies, including Discovery Cruise Lines,
agreed to donate cargo space to deliver aid.
Other plans include a telethon on Haitian radio and television stations,
said Gepsie Metellus of the Haitian Neighborhood Center.
Tuesday night, Haitian community leaders organized a meeting of Gonaives
residents and their supporters at St. Paul church in Little Haiti.
''What happened in Haiti is huge,'' businessman Francois Joachin told an
audience of about three dozen. ''I can't do it alone; you can't do it
alone.''
Joachin has six sisters and seven brothers in downtown Gonaives -- and no
word from any of them.
email this print this
As the storm toll mounted in the Caribbean, Miami-Dade leaders hoped to lead
by example with financial help.
BY TRENTON DANIEL AND TERE FIGUERAS
tdaniel@herald.com
Jacotte Previlus had parked herself next to her TV, radio and telephone
since Saturday, when relatives in the Haitian city of Gonaives told her
floodwaters were creeping under their doorstep.
A torrential downpour fed by Tropical Storm Jeanne followed, the phone lines
fell and all communication was lost.
''It's very stressful and painful,'' Previlus said Tuesday, still not
knowing about the well-being of her family and friends in Haiti. ''You're by
the radio, you're by the phone, and everybody lives by the TV.''
Today, the Miramar resident, her mother and aunt leave for Port-au-Prince,
and then take a bus as far as flooded roads will allow, to Gonaives, the
northern port city devastated by Jeanne.
As the death toll neared 700 on Tuesday, Miami-Dade County and Haitian
leaders appealed to residents to contribute to relief efforts not only for
Haiti but its suffering Caribbean neighbors.
The county led the way with more than $90,000 from commissioners' office
budgets.
Commission Chairwoman Barbara Carey-Shuler donated $10,000, and most of the
commissioners were ready to donate funds from their budgets, including
$10,000 each from commissioners Katy Sorenson, Dennis Moss, Sally Heyman,
Jose ''Pepe'' Diaz, Dorrin Rolle, Rebeca Sosa and Javier Soto.
Libraries and fire stations will collect battery-operated radios, batteries,
canned food, diapers, dry milk, candles, blankets, first-aid supplies,
flashlights, water and matches. Commissioner Joe Martinez -- who helped
organize a flotilla of private boats to deliver donated goods to the Bahamas
last week -- said several companies, including Discovery Cruise Lines,
agreed to donate cargo space to deliver aid.
Other plans include a telethon on Haitian radio and television stations,
said Gepsie Metellus of the Haitian Neighborhood Center.
Tuesday night, Haitian community leaders organized a meeting of Gonaives
residents and their supporters at St. Paul church in Little Haiti.
''What happened in Haiti is huge,'' businessman Francois Joachin told an
audience of about three dozen. ''I can't do it alone; you can't do it
alone.''
Joachin has six sisters and seven brothers in downtown Gonaives -- and no
word from any of them.
_________________________________________________________________
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