News

Two months later, relief supplies arriving in Haiti region still reeling from quake

The Haitian Times
www.haitiantimes.com 
By Sam Bojarski

A truck full of earthquake relief supplies at a Brooklyn port on Oct. 4. Courtesy of HALEFO

NEW YORK — As the diaspora rallied to assist Haiti after yet another devastating earthquake on Aug. 14, a group of Haitian-American NYPD officers helped organize a donation drive at police precincts throughout New York City. In the collection effort also supported by elected officials, precincts opened their doors to collect a variety of goods, including canned foods, bottled water, clothing and baby supplies through Sept. 3. 

Members of the Haitian American Law Enforcement Fraternal Organization (HALEFO) then collected the supplies from the police precincts and transported the items to a Long Island City warehouse for storage. From there, said HALEFO spokesperson Claude Jean-Pierre, the group had to finalize transportation logistics. 

In the end, the relief supplies — 11 containers carrying 100 tons of supplies, according to local media — left the city on a container ship bound for Port-au-Prince Oct. 4. They are being shipped in-kind and will be received in Haiti by HALEFO’s partner, Food for the Poor Haiti.

To view the full story, please subscribe to The Haitian Times. You can choose a $60 Annual Subscription or a $5 Weekly Pass.

When you join The Haitian Times family, you’ll get unlimited digital access to high-quality journalism about Haiti and Haitians you won’t get anywhere else. We’ve been at this for 20 years and pride ourselves on representing you, our diaspora experience and a holistic view of Haiti that larger media doesn’t show you. 

Join now or renew to get:
— Instant access to one-of-kind stories and special reports 
— Local news from our communities (especially New York and Florida)
— Profiles of Haitians at the top of their fields
— Downloadable lists and resources about Haitian culture 
— Membership merch, perks and special invitations 

First-time subscribers also receive a special welcome gift handmade in Haiti by expert artisans! Do it for the culture and support Black-owned businesses.

If you’re seeing this message but you’re already a subscriber, you can log in for immediate access to this story.

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Cancel reply

You May Also Like

News

Fire at the UNESCO site threatens the region’s ecosystems and Haitian livelihoods

News

BY MURDITH JOSEPH PORT-AU-PRINCE — By now, Louisius Saint-Pierre would have harvested a good amount of peas at his farm in Pestel but today he...

News

The Haitian Times www.haitiantimes.com By Leonardo March BROOKLYN — Feeling the pain of inflation, some Haitian New Yorkers are reconsidering the amount of money they send...

News

The Haitian Times www.haitiantimes.com By Ashley Miznazi MIAMI — Children attending summer camp at Family Action Network Movement (FANM) learned a key lesson during their final week:...

Copyright © 2021 I Messenger Media

Exit mobile version