Nadain
Javier repairs the leaking roof of his makeshift house in the
earthquake-ravaged neighborhood of Campeche, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti,
December 6, 2012. The Red Cross promised to build hundreds of new homes
in Campeche but none have been built.
Saturday, 06 June 2015 --The neighborhood of Campeche sprawls up a steep hillside in Haiti’s
capital city, Port-au-Prince. Goats rustle in trash that goes forever
uncollected. Children kick a deflated volleyball in a dusty lot below a
wall with a hand-painted logo of the American Red Cross.
In late 2011, the Red Cross launched a multimillion-dollar project to
transform the desperately poor area, which was hit hard by the
earthquake that struck Haiti the year before. The main focus of the
project — called LAMIKA, an acronym in Creole for “A Better Life in My
Neighborhood” — was building hundreds of permanent homes.
Today, not one home has been built in Campeche. Many residents live
in shacks made of rusty sheet metal, without access to drinkable water,
electricity or basic sanitation. When it rains, their homes flood and
residents bail out mud and water.
The Red Cross received an outpouring of donations after the quake, nearly half a billion dollars.
The group has publicly celebrated its work. But in fact, the Red
Cross has repeatedly failed on the ground in Haiti. Confidential memos,
emails from worried top officers, and accounts of a dozen frustrated and
disappointed insiders show the charity has broken promises, squandered
donations, and made dubious claims of success.
The Red Cross says it has provided homes to more than 130,000 people.
But the actual number of permanent homes the group has built in all of
Haiti: six.
After the earthquake, Red Cross CEO Gail McGovern unveiled ambitious plans to “
develop brand-new communities.” None has ever been built.
Aid organizations from around the world have struggled after the
earthquake in Haiti, the Western Hemisphere’s poorest country. But
ProPublica and NPR’s investigation shows that many of the Red Cross’s
failings in Haiti are of its own making. They are also part of a larger
pattern in which the organization has botched delivery of aid after
disasters such as
Superstorm Sandy. Despite its difficulties, the Red Cross remains the
charity of choice for ordinary Americans and corporations alike after natural disasters.
One issue that has hindered the Red Cross’ work in Haiti is an
overreliance on foreigners who could not speak French or Creole, current
and former employees say.
In a blistering 2011 memo, the then-director of the Haiti program, Judith St. Fort, wrote that the group
was failing in Haiti and that senior managers had made
“very disturbing” remarks disparaging
Haitian employees. St. Fort, who is Haitian American, wrote that the
comments included, “he is the only hard working one among them” and “the
ones that we have hired are not strong so we probably should not pay
close attention to Haitian CVs.”
The Red Cross won’t disclose details of how it has spent the hundreds
of millions of dollars donated for Haiti. But our reporting shows that
less money reached those in need than the Red Cross has said.
Lacking the expertise to mount its own projects, the Red Cross ended
up giving much of the money to other groups to do the work. Those groups
took out a piece of every dollar to cover overhead and management. Even
on the projects done by others, the Red Cross had its own significant
expenses – in one case, adding up to a third of the project’s budget.
In statements, the Red Cross cited the challenges all groups have
faced in post-quake Haiti, including the country’s dysfunctional
land title system.
“Like many humanitarian organizations responding in Haiti, the
American Red Cross met complications in relation to government
coordination delays, disputes over land ownership, delays at Haitian
customs, challenges finding qualified staff who were in short supply and
high demand, and the cholera outbreak, among other challenges,” the
charity said.
The group said it responded quickly to internal concerns, including
hiring an expert to train staff on cultural competency after St. Fort’s
memo. While the group won’t provide a breakdown of its projects, the Red
Cross said it has done more than 100. The
projects include repairing
4,000 homes, giving several thousand families temporary shelters,
donating $44 million for food after the earthquake, and helping fund the
construction of a hospital.
“Millions of Haitians are safer, healthier, more resilient, and
better prepared for future disasters thanks to generous donations to the
American Red Cross,” McGovern wrote in a recent
report marking the fifth anniversary of the earthquake.
In other promotional materials, the Red Cross said it has helped
“more than 4.5 million” individual Haitians “get back on their feet.”
It has not provided details to back up the claim. And Jean-Max
Bellerive, Haiti’s prime minister at the time of the earthquake, doubts
the figure, pointing out the country’s entire population is only about
10 million.
“No, no,” Bellerive said of the Red Cross’ claim, “it’s not possible.”
When the earthquake struck Haiti in January 2010, the Red Cross was
facing a crisis of its own. McGovern had become chief executive just 18
months earlier, inheriting a deficit and an organization that had faced
scandals after 9/11 and Katrina.
Inside the Red Cross, the Haiti disaster was seen as “a spectacular
fundraising opportunity,” recalled one former official who helped
organize the effort. Michelle Obama, the NFL and a long list of
celebrities appealed for donations to the group.
The Red Cross kept soliciting money well after it had enough for the
emergency relief that is the group’s stock in trade. Doctors Without
Borders, in contrast, stopped fundraising off the earthquake after it
decided it had enough money. The donations to the Red Cross helped the
group erase its more-than $100 million deficit.
The Red Cross ultimately raised
far more than any other charity.
A year after the quake, McGovern announced that the Red Cross would use the donations to make a lasting impact in Haiti.
We asked the Red Cross to show us around its projects in Haiti so we
could see the results of its work. It declined. So earlier this year we
went to Campeche to see one of the group’s signature projects for
ourselves.
Street vendors in the dusty neighborhood immediately pointed us to
Jean Jean Flaubert, the head of a community group that the Red Cross set
up as a local sounding board.
Sitting with us in their sparse one-room office, Flaubert and his
colleagues grew angry talking about the Red Cross. They pointed to the
lack of progress in the neighborhood and the healthy salaries paid to
expatriate aid workers.
“What the Red Cross told us is that they are coming here to change
Campeche. Totally change it,” said Flaubert. “Now I do not understand
the change that they are talking about. I think the Red Cross is working
for themselves.”
The Red Cross’ initial
plan said the focus would be building homes — an internal
proposal put
the number at 700. Each would have finished floors, toilets, showers,
even rainwater collection systems. The houses were supposed to be
finished in January 2013.
None of that ever happened. Carline Noailles, who was the project’s
manager in Washington, said it was endlessly delayed because the Red
Cross “didn’t have the know-how.”
Another former official who worked on the Campeche project said,
“Everything takes four times as long because it would be micromanaged
from DC, and they had no development experience.”
Shown an English-language press release from the Red Cross website, Flaubert was stunned to learn of the project’s
$24 million budget — and that it is due to end next year.
“Not only is [the Red Cross] not doing it,” Flaubert said, “now I’m
learning that the Red Cross is leaving next year. I don’t understand
that.” (The Red Cross says it did tell community leaders about the end
date. It also accused us of “creating ill will in the community which
may give rise to a security incident.”)
The project has since been reshaped and downscaled. A road is being
built. Some existing homes have received earthquake reinforcement and a
few schools are being repaired. Some solar street lights have been
installed, though many broke and residents say others are unreliable.
The group’s most recent
press release on the project cites achievements such as training school children in disaster response.
The Red Cross said it has to scale back its housing plans because it
couldn’t acquire the rights to land. No homes will be built.
Other Red Cross infrastructure projects also fizzled.
In January 2011, McGovern announced a $30 million partnership with
the U.S. Agency for International Development, or USAID. The agency
would build roads and other infrastructure in at least two locations
where the Red Cross would build new homes.
But it took more than two and a half years, until August 2013, for
the Red Cross just to sign an agreement with USAID on the program, and
even that was for only one site. The program was ultimately canceled
because of a land dispute.
A Government Accountability Office report attributed the severe delays to problems “in securing land title and because of
turnover in Red Cross leadership” in its Haiti program.
Other groups also ran
into trouble with land titles and other issues. But they also ultimately built 9,000 homes compared to the Red Cross’ six.
Asked about the Red Cross’ housing projects in Haiti, David Meltzer,
the group’s general counsel and chief international officer, said
changing conditions forced changes in plans. “If we had said, ‘All we’re
going to do is build new homes,’ we’d still be looking for land,” he
said.
The USAID project’s collapse left the Red Cross grasping for ways to spend money earmarked for it.
“Any ideas on how to spend the rest of this?? (
Besides the wonderful helicopter idea?),”
McGovern wrote to Meltzer in a November 2013 email obtained by
ProPublica and NPR. “Can we fund Conrad’s hospital? Or more to
PiH[Partners in Health]? Any more shelter projects?”
It’s not clear what helicopter idea McGovern was referring to or if
it was ever carried out. The Red Cross would say only that her comments
were “grounded in the American Red Cross’ strategy and priorities, which
focus on health and housing.”
Another signature project, known in Creole as “A More Resilient Great
North,” is supposed to rehabilitate roads in poor, rural communities
and to help them get clean water and sanitation.
But two years after it started, the $13 million effort has been
faltering badly. An internal evaluation from March found residents were
upset because nothing had been done to improve water access or
infrastructure or to make “
contributions of any sort to the well being of households,” the report said.
So much bad feeling built up in one area that the population “
rejects the project.”
Instead of making concrete improvements to living conditions, the Red
Cross has launched hand-washing education campaigns. The internal
evaluation noted that these were “not effective when people had no
access to water and no soap.” (The Red Cross declined to comment on the
project.)
The group’s failures went beyond just infrastructure.
When a cholera epidemic raged through Haiti nine months after the quake, the biggest part of the Red Cross’ response a
plan to distribute soap and oral rehydration salts — was crippled by “
internal issues that go unaddressed,” wrote the director of the Haiti program in her May 2011 memo.
Throughout that year, cholera was a steady killer. By September 2011,
when the death toll had surpassed 6,000, the project was still listed
as “very behind schedule” according to another internal document.
The Red Cross said in a statement that its cholera response, including a
vaccination campaign, has continued for years and helped millions of Haitians.
But while other groups also struggled early responding to cholera, some
performed well.
“None of these people had to die. That’s what upsets me,” said Paul
Christian Namphy, a Haitian water and sanitation official who helped
lead the effort to fight cholera. He says early failures by the Red
Cross and other NGOs had a devastating impact. “These numbers should
have been zero.”
So why did the Red Cross’ efforts fall so short? It wasn’t just that Haiti is a hard place to work.
“They collected nearly half a billion dollars,” said a congressional
staffer who helped oversee Haiti reconstruction. “But they had a
problem. And the problem was that they had absolutely no expertise.”
Lee Malany was in charge of the Red Cross’ shelter program in Haiti
starting in 2010. He remembers a meeting in Washington that fall where
officials did not seem to have any idea how to spend millions of dollars
set aside for housing. Malany says the officials wanted to know which
projects would generate good publicity, not which projects would provide
the most homes.
“When I walked out of that meeting I looked at the people that I was
working with and said, ‘You know this is very disconcerting, this is
depressing,’” he recalled.
The Red Cross said in a statement its Haiti program has never put publicity over delivering aid.
Malany resigned the next year from his job in Haiti. “I said there’s
no reason for me to stay here. I got on the plane and left.”
Sometimes it wasn’t a matter of expertise, but whether anybody was
filling key jobs. An April 2012 organizational chart obtained by
ProPublica and NPR lists 9 of 30 leadership positions in Haiti as
vacant, including slots for experts on health and shelter.
The Red Cross said vacancies and turnover were inevitable because of
“the security situation, separation from family for international staff,
and the demanding nature of the work.”
The constant upheaval took a toll. Internal documents refer to repeated
attempts over years to
“finalize” and “complete” a strategic plan for the Haiti program,
efforts that were delayed by changes in senior management. As late as
March 2014, more than four years into a six-year program, an internal
update cites a “revised strategy” still awaiting “final sign-off.”
The Red Cross said settling on a plan early would have been a
mistake. “It would be hard to create the perfect plan from the beginning
in a complicated place like Haiti,” it said. “But we also need to
begin, so we create plans that are continually revised.”
Those plans were further undermined by the Red Cross’ reliance on
expats. Noailles, the Haitian development professional who worked for
the Red Cross on the Campeche project, said expat staffers struggled in
meetings with local officials.
“Going to meetings with the community when you don’t speak the
language is not productive,” she said. Sometimes, she recalled, expat
staffers would skip such meetings altogether.
The Red Cross said it has “made it a priority to hire Haitians”
despite lots of competition for local professionals, and that over 90
percent of its staff is Haitian. The charity said it used a local human
resources firm to help.
Yet very few Haitians have made it into the group’s top echelons in
Haiti, according to five current and former Red Cross staffers as well
as staff lists obtained by ProPublica and NPR.
That not only affected the group’s ability to work in Haiti, it was also expensive.
According to an internal Red Cross budgeting document for the project
in Campeche, the project manager – a position reserved for an
expatriate – was entitled to allowances for housing, food and other
expenses, home leave trips, R&R four times a year, and relocation
expenses. In all, it added up to $140,000.
Compensation for a senior Haitian engineer — the top local position — was less than one-third of that, $42,000 a year.
Shelim Dorval, a Haitian administrator who worked for the Red Cross
coordinating travel and housing for expatriate staffers, recalled
thinking it was a waste to spend so much to bring in people with little
knowledge of Haiti when locals were available.
“For each one of those expats, they were having high salaries,
staying in a fancy house, and getting vacation trips back to their
countries,” Dorval said. “A lot of money was spent on those people who
were not Haitian, who had nothing to do with Haiti. The money was just
going back to the United States.”
Soon after the earthquake, McGovern, the Red Cross CEO, said the
group would make sure donors knew exactly what happened to their money.
The Red Cross would “lead the effort in transparency,” she pledged. “We are happy to share the way we are spending our dollars.”
That hasn’t happened. The Red Cross’ public reports offer only
broad categories about
where $488 million in donations has gone. The biggest category is
shelter, at about $170 million. The others include health, emergency
relief and disaster preparedness.
It has declined repeated requests to disclose the specific projects,
to explain how much money went to each or to say what the results of
each project were.
There is reason to doubt the Red Cross’ claims that it helped 4.5
million Haitians. An internal evaluation found that in some areas, the
Red Cross reported helping
more people than even lived in the communities. In other cases, the figures were low, and in others double-counting went uncorrected.
In describing its work, the Red Cross also conflates different types
of aid, making it more difficult to assess the charity’s efforts in
Haiti.
For example, while the Red Cross says it provided more than 130,000
people with homes, that includes thousands of people who were not
actually given homes, but rather were “trained in proper construction
techniques.” (That was
first reported by the Haiti blog of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.)
The figure includes people who got short-term rental assistance or
were housed in several thousand “transitional shelters,” which are
temporary structures that can get eaten up by termites or tip over in
storms. It also includes modest improvements on 5,000 temporary
shelters.
The Red Cross also won’t break down what portion of donations went to overhead.
McGovern
told CBS
News a few months after the quake, “Minus the 9 cents overhead, 91
cents on the dollar will be going to Haiti. And I give you my word and
my commitment, I’m banking my integrity, my own personal sense of
integrity on that statement.”
But the reality is that less money went to Haiti than 91 percent.
That’s because in addition to the Red Cross’ 9 percent overhead, the
other groups that got grants from the Red Cross also have their own
overhead.
In one case, the Red Cross sent $6 million to the International
Federation of the Red Cross for rental subsidies to help Haitians leave
tent camps. The IFRC then took out 26 percent for overhead and what the
IFRC described as program-related “administration, finance, human
resources” and similar costs.
Beyond all that, the Red Cross also spends another piece of each
dollar for what it describes as “program costs incurred by the American
Red Cross in managing” the projects done by other groups.
The American Red Cross’ management and other costs consumed an
additional 24 percent of the money on one project, according to the
group’s statements and internal documents. The actual work, upgrading
shelters, was done by the Swiss and Spanish Red Cross societies.
“It’s a cycle of overhead,” said Jonathan Katz, the
Associated Press reporter in Haiti at the time of the earthquake who tracked post-disaster spending for his book,
The Big Truck That Went By.
“It was always going to be the American Red Cross taking a 9 percent
cut, re-granting to another group, which would take out their cut.”
Given the results produced by the Red Cross’ projects in Haiti,
Bellerive, the former prime minister, said he has a hard time fathoming
what’s happened to donors’ money.
“Five hundred million dollars in Haiti is a lot of money,” he said.
“I’m not a big mathematician, but I can make some additions. I know more
or less the cost of things. Unless you don’t pay for the gasoline the
same price I was paying, unless you pay people 20 times what I was
paying them, unless the cost of the house you built was five times the
cost I was paying, it doesn’t add up for me.”