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Monetary Contributions to Established Relief Agencies are Always the Most Useful Response
to Disasters
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- Financial contributions allow professional
relief organizations to purchase exactly what is most urgently needed by disaster victims
and to pay for the transportation necessary to distribute those supplies. Unlike in-kind
donations, cash donations entail no transportation cost. In addition, cash donations allow
relief supplies to be purchased at locations as near to the disaster site as possible.
Supplies, particularly food, can almost always be purchased locally - even in famine
situations. This approach has the triple advantage of stimulating local economies
(providing employment, generating cash flow), ensuring that supplies arrive as quickly as
possible and reducing transport and storage costs. Cash contributions to established
legitimate relief agencies are always considerably more beneficial than
the donation of commodities.
- Confirm There is a Need for All Items
Being Collected.
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- Do not make assumptions about the needs of
disaster victims. Exactly what is needed can be confirmed by checking with an established
relief organization that has personnel working on-site. Do not send what is not needed;
unneeded commodities compete with priority relief items for transportation and storage.
Organizations that receive in-kind relief donations can help this process by clearly
communicating what items are required (in what size, type, etc.) as well as clearly
stating what items or services are NOT needed. Please remember, certain foods,
particularly in famine situations, can make victims ill. In most cases, donations of
canned goods are not appropriate. The collection of bottled water is highly inefficient.
It is important to have an accurate analysis of need before determining response.
- Deliver Items Only to Organizations
having Local Distribution Capacity
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- Distributing relief supplies requires personnel
and financial resources within the affected country. To efficiently distribute relief
commodities, staff, warehouses, trucks and communications equipment are required. It is
not enough to gather supplies and send them to an affected region; a sound partnership
with a reliable local agency having transport and management capacity is mandatory.
- Donate Only to Organizations having the
Ability to Transport Collected Items to the Affected Region
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- Immediately after a disaster, many local
organizations will spontaneously begin collecting miscellaneous items for use in disaster
relief. However, at the time that these collections are begun, agency officials will not
have thought about to whom, or how, the items will be sent. It is not unusual for
community and civic groups to have collected several thousands of pounds of relief
supplies only to find that they do not know whom to send the supplies to and that they do
not have viable transportation options for shipping the goods. At this juncture, it is
often advisable for those collecting the goods to auction them off locally, converting
commodities into cash to be applied to the relief effort.
- Never Assume the U.S. Government or any
Relief Agency Will Transport Unsolicited Relief Items Free of Charge
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- It is important to make arrangements for the
transportation before collecting any kind of material donations. Never
assume that the government or any relief agency will transport donations free of charge
(or even for a fee). In the majority of cases, the collecting agency will be responsible
for paying commercial rates for the transportation and warehousing of items gathered.
- Volunteer Opportunities for Disaster
Relief are Extremely Limited
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- Volunteers without prior disaster relief
experience are generally not selected for relief assignments. Candidates with the greatest
chance of being selected have fluency in the language of the disaster-stricken area, prior
disaster relief experience, and expertise in technical fields such as medicine,
communications logistics, water/sanitation engineering. In many cases, these professionals
are already available in-country. Most agencies will require at least ten years of
experience, as well as several years of experience working overseas. It is not unusual to
request that volunteers make a commitment to spend at least three months working on a
particular disaster. Most offers of another body to drive trucks, set up tents,
and feed children are not accepted. Keep in mind that once a relief agency accepts a
volunteer, they are responsible for the volunteer's well-being -i.e., food, shelter,
health and security. Resources are strained during a disaster, and another person without
the necessary technical skills and experience can often be a considerable burden to an
ongoing relief effort.
These Guidelines are excerpts from Managing
Resource Coordination for Sudden-Onset Foreign Disasters: A Case Study Focusing on the
United States' Response to Hurricane Gilbert/Jamaica by David Callahan.
VITA. 1989. |