CARIBBEAN HURRICANE MATTHEW

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CARIBBEAN HURRICANE MATTHEW FACT SHEET #14, FISCAL YEAR (FY) 2017 NOVEMBER 29, 2016 ON OCTOBER 12, USAI NUMBERS AT A GLANCE 546 Number of Confirmed Deaths in Haiti GoH/UN October 13, 2016 33,600 Number of People Registered in Evacuation Shelters in Haiti* IOM/UN November 25, 2016 HIGHLIGHTS UN releases revised flash appeal for Haiti, requesting $139 million in humanitarian funding USAID/OFDA partners and other response actors bolster WASH support in hurricane-affected areas USAID/FFP provides more than $14.4 million for cash-based food assistance in Grand Anse and Sud HUMANITARIAN FUNDING FOR THE HURRICANE MATTHEW RESPONSE IN FY 2017 USAID/OFDA 1 $29,835,398 USAID/FFP 2 $34,647,916 USAID/Haiti $1,546,763 DoD 3 $13,057,000 $79,087,077 2.1 million Estimated Number of Hurricane-Affected People in Haiti GoH/UN November 11, 2016 1.4 million Estimated Number of People in Haiti Requiring Humanitarian Assistance GoH/UN November 11, 2016 806,000 Estimated Number of People in Haiti Requiring Immediate Food Assistance GoH/UN November 11, 2016 KEY DEVELOPMENTS A UN World Food Program (WFP)-chartered barge with the capacity to transport up to 500 metric tons (MT) of relief commodities arrived in Haiti s capital city of Port-au-Prince on November 21. Using the barge, WFP planned to transport approximately 425 MT of humanitarian cargo including food assistance, shelter supplies, and water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) items from Port-au-Prince to Anse d Hainault commune, Grand Anse Department, for onward distribution to hurricane-affected communities. More than 50 response organizations including nine USAID/OFDA partners are supporting efforts by the Government of Haiti (GoH) National Directorate for Water and Sanitation (DINEPA) to restore communities access to safe drinking water and ensure adequate hygiene and sanitation in hurricane-affected areas. As of November 16, WASH actors had established nearly 30 mobile water treatment units supplying potable water to at least 100,000 people in the hurricane-affected departments of Grand Anse, Nippes, and Sud. USAID/FFP recently contributed more than $14.4 million to a non-governmental organization (NGO) consortium to provide cash-based food assistance to approximately 500,000 people in Grand Anse and Sud. The new funding brings total U.S. Government (USG) support for Hurricane Matthew relief efforts in Haiti, The Bahamas, and Jamaica to nearly $79.1 million. *Note: IOM registration remained ongoing as of November 25. 1 USAID s Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance (USAID/OFDA) 2 USAID s Office of Food for Peace (USAID/FFP) 3 U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) 1

HUMANITARIAN ACCESS AND LOGISTICS SUPPORT While the Haitian National Police and the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) remain responsible for providing escorts for large-scale humanitarian distributions, response organizations are bolstering community engagement efforts to reduce reliance on armed escorts, per a mid-november directive from UN Deputy Humanitarian Coordinator Sebastian Rhodes Stampa. On November 28, the Sud departmental emergency operations center (COUD) hosted a working group session on community engagement for reponse actors to share best practices in order to minimize the risk of looting and other security incidents. Access to mountainous communities in hurricane-affected areas remains challenging, the UN reports. During the week of November 22, heavy rains and landslides in Grand Anse s Jeremie commune and nearby locations limited food distributions in hard-to-reach sites and temporarily prevented mobile health clinics from accessing Anse d Hainault, Dame Marie, and Les Irois communes, according to the UN. The WFP-led Logistics Working Group the coordinating body for humanitarian logistics activities, comprising UN agencies, NGOs, and other stakeholders is monitoring the conditions of secondary roads to identify access constraints and improve related coordination and planning efforts. On November 21, a WFP-chartered barge with transport capacity of approximately 500 MT arrived in Port-au-Prince. The barge, intended to augment humanitarian actors capacity to supply relief commodities to hard-to-reach coastal areas, brings WFP s cumulative sea transport capacity to 610 MT. Using the barge, WFP planned to transport approximately 425 MT of humanitarian cargo including food assistance, shelter supplies, and WASH items from Port-au-Prince to Anse d Hainault for onward distribution by USAID partners the Agency for Technical Cooperation and Development (ACTED) and WFP. EMERGENCY FOOD ASSISTANCE Preliminary results from a recent USAID-funded Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) assessment indicate that some households in southwestern Haiti are experiencing Crisis IPC 3 or worse levels of food insecurity, representing a deterioration from the Minimal IPC 1 levels experienced prior to the hurricane. 4 Ongoing humanitarian food assistance to affected areas may be preventing higher levels of food insecurity, FEWS NET reports. With support from USAID/FFP, WFP continues to address the urgent food needs of hurricane-affected communities. As of November 25, WFP and implementing partners had distributed approximately 6,600 MT of emergency food assistance to an estimated 630,000 people nearly 79 percent of the 800,000 people targeted in Grand Anse, Nippes, and Sud. WFP also provided blanket supplementary food products to prevent and treat acute malnutrition to approximately 3,130 children younger than five years of age. From November 25 27, WFP and implementing partners reached an additional 6,800 households in Grand Anse and Sud with food assistance, according to USAID/FFP staff in Haiti. WFP plans to conclude all remaining first phase food distributions during the week of November 28. In the coming months, WFP and other food security actors plan to transition from in-kind food distributions to cash-based food assistance, as market recovery allows, to promote and restore local economic activity. Food security stakeholders anticipate that unconditional cash assistance will transition to cash-for-work programs beginning in January 2017. In-kind food assistance will continue throughout this period in areas where local markets are unable to meet household food needs, response actors report. USAID/FFP recently provided more than $14.4 million to an NGO consortium led by CARE and including ACTED, Catholic Relief Services (CRS), Food for the Hungry, and Mercy Corps to provide cash-based food assistance to hurricane-affected families. The consortium plans to provide unconditional cash transfers meeting approximately 80 percent of beneficiaries monthly food needs to more than 500,000 individuals in Grand Anse and Sud. After an initial distribution of unconditional cash assistance, CARE and partners intend to transition to cash-forwork activities that will assist approximately 98,000 beneficiaries, thereby increasing vulnerable households access to food, while restoring community assets damaged by the hurricane. 4 The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) is a standardized tool that aims to classify the severity and magnitude of food insecurity. The IPC scale, which is comparable across countries, ranges from Minimal IPC I to Famine IPC 5. 2

HEALTH AND WASH Response actors continue to support cholera prevention and treatment efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Matthew. The GoH Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP) reported nearly 470 new suspected cholera cases in Grand Anse and Sud between November 6 and 12 consistent with the number of cases reported the previous week. Health actors had treated approximately 1,800 suspected cholera cases in hurricane-affected areas as of early November, according to the UN. MSPP is finalizing data from the oral cholera vaccination campaign conducted in Grand Anse and Sud between November 8 and 18. As of November 25, preliminary results indicated that the campaign reached more than 729,200 people, including an estimated 364,600 people in Sud and 364,530 people in Grand Anse approximately 90 percent of the 820,000 people targeted for vaccination. U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) staff continue to support MSPP to perform cholera-related epidemiology and surveillance efforts, including through case investigation, specimen collection and testing, and training for laboratory technicians. WASH actors including USAID/OFDA partners CRS and Samaritan s Purse (SP) are working to promote strong hygiene practices and effective sanitation in hurricane-affected areas of Grand Anse and Sud. With USAID/OFDA support, CRS is conducting hygiene promotion activities in Grand Anse s Caricolie community and Marcfranc commune, while SP is training more than 40 community-based agents to promote safe hygiene practices in Grand Anse s Abricots and Bonbon communes. As of November 16, humanitarian organizations had reached at least 130,000 people in 10 communes with hygiene promotion activities in Grand Anse and Sud. More than 50 response organizations are supporting DINEPA s efforts to restore communities access to safe drinking water and ensure adequate hygiene and sanitation in hurricane-affected areas, according to the WASH Working Group. As of November 16, WASH actors had established nearly 30 mobile water treatment units supplying potable water to at least 100,000 people in Grand Anse, Nippes, and Sud. Response actors had also distributed approximately 3.5 million Aquatabs and bottled water to an estimated 73,000 people across the three departments. Additionally, with support from the World Bank, DINEPA plans to rehabilitate more than 70 water supply networks in hurricane-affected areas. Through USAID/OFDA assistance, SP is restoring rural communities access to safe drinking water through the rehabilitation of 11 piped water networks and the protection of five fresh water springs in Abricots and Bonbon. Additionally, USAID/OFDA partners CRS and the UN Children s Fund (UNICEF) are coordinating with sub-grantee Water Mission to restore access to clean drinking water in Grand Anse, including through the establishment of a water treatment plant capable of producing up to 160,000 liters of water per day in Grand Anse s Jeremie city. The facility supplies approximately 10 liters of safe drinking water to an estimated 10,000 people daily, reaching approximately 20 percent of the city s inhabitants. Water Mission is also operating six water treatment units providing sufficient water for approximately 18,000 people in Grand Anse s Anse d Hainault, Dame-Marie, and Jeremie communes. SHELTER AND SETTLEMENTS Response actors continue to report forced evacuations of displaced people temporarily sheltering in schools in Grand Anse and Sud, according to the UN. The USAID Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) is collaborating with partners and local authorities to develop a coordinated strategy for addressing the needs of residual shelter populations, particularly amid the ongoing risk of forced evictions from temporary shelters. USAID/OFDA partners plan to utilize data from the International Organization for Migration (IOM) Displacement Tracking Matrix to identify displaced households areas of origin and conduct multi-sector needs assessments. As part of its emergency returns response, USAID/OFDA partner Save the Children/U.S. (SC/US) had distributed plastic sheeting and rope to approximately 2,560 households in Sud s Beaumont, Camp-Perrin, and Torbeck communes as of November 28. As of November 14, relief actors in Haiti had distributed plastic sheeting to nearly 403,000 people in the three departments, according to the Shelter/Non-Food Item Working Group. USAID/OFDA partners and 3

locally-based USAID/OFDA consultants are providing technical guidance to recipients on the proper utilization of shelter kits and to ensure the appropriate construction of temporary shelters. HUMANITARIAN COORDINATION AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT USAID/Haiti is supporting Management Systems International (MSI) to provide five short-term technical advisors including communications, geographic information systems, logistics, and social protection specialists to support DPC coordination activities in Grand Anse and Sud. Additionally, with $250,000 in assistance from USAID/OFDA, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) is strengthening humanitarian coordination among the GoH, UN officials, relief organizations, and other stakeholders to ensure a more effective and coherent response. OTHER HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE In late November, OCHA released a revised flash appeal to reflect both delivered humanitarian assistance and the outstanding critical needs of hurricane-affected people in Haiti. The revised appeal requests a total of $139 million an increase of approximately $19 million and seeks to provide emergency food assistance to 806,000 people; emergency relief commodities to 805,000 people; and health and WASH assistance to 750,000 people, among other interventions. As of November 29, international donors had contributed $64.3 million approximately 46 percent of the requested total toward the revised flash appeal, according to the OCHA Financial Tracking Service. 2016 HUMANITARIAN FUNDING * PER DONOR $79,087,077 $12,191,265 $9,614,471 $5,985,602 $4,678,710 $2,577,319 $2,244,694 $1,925,218 $1,918,650 $1,345,291 USG CERF** UK Canada Sweden Switzerland Ireland European Commission Australia Italy * Funding figures reflect contributions from the top donors as of November 29, 2016. All international figures are according to the OCHA Financial Tracking Service and based on international commitments during the current calendar year, while USG figures are according to the USG and reflect the most recent USG commitments based on the fiscal year, which began on October 1, 2016. **The Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) is a pooled humanitarian fund established and managed by the UN to support sudden-onset and underfunded emergencies. 4

CONTEXT Hurricane Matthew made initial landfall near Les Anglais, Haiti, and secondary landfall over eastern Cuba on October 4 before continuing to traverse The Bahamas from October 5 7. The hurricane brought destructive winds, heavy rainfall, and dangerous storm surge, resulting in extensive damage to crops, houses, and infrastructure, as well as widespread flooding in some areas. On October 2, U.S. Ambassador to Haiti Peter F. Mulrean and U.S. Chargé d Affaires, a.i., for Jamaica Eric Khant issued disaster declarations in response to the anticipated effects of Hurricane Matthew. U.S. Chargé d Affaires, a.i., Lisa A. Johnson issued a disaster declaration in response to the anticipated effects of Hurricane Matthew in The Bahamas on October 4. USAID activated a regional DART on October 3 with staff in The Bahamas, Haiti, and Jamaica. USAID also stood up a Washington, D.C.-based Response Management Team to coordinate the regional humanitarian response. Based on assessment findings and in consultation with government representatives in the two countries, USAID discontinued DART operations in Jamaica and The Bahamas on October 5 and 13, respectively. USAID/OFDA regional staff will continue to monitor USAID/OFDA assistance provided to the Bahamas Red Cross (BRC) and the Jamaica Red Cross (JRC) to address the immediate needs of populations affected by Hurricane Matthew. USG HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE FOR THE HURRICANE MATTHEW RESPONSE IN FY 2017 1 IMPLEMENTING PARTNER ACTIVITY LOCATION AMOUNT ACTED American Red Cross (AmCross) CRS USAID/OFDA 2 HAITI Humanitarian Coordination and Information Management, Logistics Support and Relief Commodities, WASH Logistics Support and Relief Commodities, Shelter and Logistics Support and Relief Commodities, Health, Humanitarian Studies, Analysis, and Applications, Shelter and, WASH Grand'Anse, Sud $3,510,600 Grand'Anse, Nippes, Sud $1,360,176 Grand'Anse, Sud $2,152,560 Handicap International (HI) Health, Protection Grand Anse, Sud $360,000 Heart to Heart International (HHI) Health Grand'Anse $504,394 International Medical Corps (IMC) Health, Nutrition, Protection, WASH Grand'Anse, Sud $1,150,000 IOM J/P Haitian Relief Organization (J/P HRO) Humanitarian Coordination and Information Management, Logistics Support and Relief Commodities, Shelter and Economic Recovery and Market Systems, Shelter and Grand'Anse, Ouest, Sud $2,732,000 Grand'Anse, Sud $1,274,666 Medair Shelter and Sud $299,955 Médecins du Monde USA (MDM/USA) Health, Protection Grand'Anse, Sud $750,000 Mercy Corps Shelter and Nippes $300,000 OCHA Humanitarian Coordination and Information Management Haiti $250,000 Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO) Health Grand'Anse, Sud $300,000 Première Urgence Internationale (PUI) Health, Logistics Support and Relief Commodities, WASH Grand'Anse $750,000 SP Shelter and, WASH Grand'Anse $763,903 SC/US Health, Nutrition, Protection, Shelter and, WASH Grand'Anse, Sud $2,850,000 Solidarités WASH Nippes $755,000 UNICEF Protection, WASH Grand'Anse $562,000 UN Population Fund (UNFPA) Protection Grand'Anse, Nippes, Nord-Ouest, Sud $100,500 5

World Concern Development Organization (WCDO) WFP Shelter and, WASH Sud $300,000 Logistics Support and Relief Commodities Grand'Anse, Nord- Ouest, Sud-Est $3,258,530 Airlifted Relief Commodities Haiti $5,045,714 TOTAL USAID/OFDA FUNDING FOR HAITI $29,329,998 BRC THE BAHAMAS Logistics Support and Relief Commodities, Shelter and The Bahamas $100,000 Airlifted Relief Commodities The Bahamas $305,400 JAMAICA JRC Logistics Support and Relief Commodities Jamaica $100,000 TOTAL USAID/OFDA FUNDING $29,835,398 USAID/FFP 3 CARE Cash Transfers, Emergency Food Assistance Haiti $15,421,246 WFP Local and Regional In-Kind Food Assistance, Logistics Support, RUSF, and Title II In-Kind Food Assistance Haiti $19,226,670 TOTAL USAID/FFP FUNDING $34,647,916 USAID/Haiti MSI Technical Assistance Grand Anse, Sud $61,763 UNICEF Emergency Education Haiti $1,485,000 TOTAL USAID/HAITI FUNDING $1,546,763 DOD 4 Logistics Support Haiti $13,057,000 TOTAL DOD FUNDING $13,057,000 TOTAL USAID HUMANITARIAN FUNDING FOR HAITI $65,524,677 TOTAL USG HUMANITARIAN FUNDING FOR HAITI $78,581,677 TOTAL USG HUMANITARIAN FUNDING FOR THE HURRICANE MATTHEW RESPONSE IN FY 2017 $79,087,077 1 Year of funding indicates the date of commitment or obligation, not appropriation, of funds. 2 USAID/OFDA funding represents committed or obligated amounts as of November 29, 2016. 3 Estimated value of food assistance and transportation costs at time of procurement, subject to change. 4 DoD has made available up to $18 million to the U.S. Southern Command to support the Hurricane Matthew response. PUBLIC DONATION INFORMATION The most effective way people can assist relief efforts is by making cash contributions to humanitarian organizations that are conducting relief operations. A list of humanitarian organizations that are accepting cash donations for disaster responses around the world can be found at www.interaction.org. USAID encourages cash donations because they allow aid professionals to procure the exact items needed (often in the affected region); reduce the burden on scarce resources (such as transportation routes, staff time, and warehouse space); can be transferred very quickly and without transportation costs; support the economy of the disaster-stricken region; and ensure culturally, dietary, and environmentally appropriate assistance. More information can be found at: USAID Center for International Disaster Information: www.cidi.org or +1.202.821.1999. Information on relief activities of the humanitarian community can be found at www.reliefweb.int. USAID/OFDA bulletins appear on the USAID website at http://www.usaid.gov/what-we-do/working-crises-and-conflict/responding-times-crisis/where-we-work 6