Tuesday, May 27, 2014

WORLD BANK to offer $45m to HAITI for Development of Tourism Industry













What do you think?
Questions to ponder:
Is this a good sustainable investment for Haiti?
Will this investment build Haiti's infrastructure?
How does tourism benefit Haitians?
Have a voice!  Comments are moderated and anonymous.  Leave your comment at the end of this blog.

HispanicBusiness.com
May 26th, 2014


The Board of Directors of the Washington-headquartered World Bank has given approval to the proposal of offering $45 million to Haiti in order to support the country in the development of its tourism sector.

The global donor will offer the funding to Haiti via the International Development Association (IDA) and the money is intended at enhancing access, preserving and managing the World Heritage Site of country s National History Park and the historic centre of the Cap-Haitien City.

The grant from the IDA will also be used for establishing new destinations for travelers, said the organization.

The Tourism Minister of Haiti - Stephanie Villedrouin revealed, Developing the North as a tourism destination in a sustainable way is part of the vision of the Ministry of Tourism.

The Minister added, Improving the conservation of our natural and cultural heritage is essential to achieve this objective. I would like to highlight that one of the strengths of the project is that it involves the communities to preserve their heritage and benefit from the economic returns of tourism.

Since past few years, Haiti has been giving more focus on the development of the country s tourism industry, mainly to enhance the infrastructure in and around the National History Park, which was visited by over 30,000 tourists in 2013.

The World Bank has stated that the Labadee port area, which is located close to the park, represents a real potential for further tourism development in the region.

The World Bank s Special Envoy to Haiti - Mary Barton-Dock stated, There is a growing demand to develop tourism in Haiti and the government is working effectively to promote the destination.

The official added, This is the opportunity to develop the tourism industry which is labor intensive and will attract the private sector.

The project, in due course, is intended at luring over 16,000 new tourists in the National History Park and establishing 370 small and medium entities providing cultural services and tourism.

The UNESCO will deliver technical support to the project, which is to be accomplished over a period of six years.

Moreover, in 2013 the Government of Haiti revealed its plans to rebuild the airport in Cap-Haitien. The redecorated airport will be named after the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

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Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Teen Inventor's Bright Idea May Light Up the World

Is it possible sometimes to become so focused on the trees, the forest is no longer seen? Ann was faced with her friend's problem and innovated a solution. Can a lesson be learned from this? Is it possible there are solutions for Haiti which have not yet even been realized? A new interjection of hope?

Have a voice! Join the discussion! Leave a comment below!



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Monday, May 12, 2014

A Lesson in Farming, Classroom to Cafeteria.

What do you think?  Plausible in Haiti?  A good example of people taking their situation in hand and inventing a sustainable solution?

At the end of this article, share your comments for others to read.  Have a voice!

New York Times
By Steven Yaccino
May 11, 2014


HAGERSTOWN, Ind. — Beyond a stack of hay bales, past the site of Indiana’s first soil-judging contest, high school students in this tiny eastern town stroll down a grassy slope to reach their newest classroom: a fenced-in field of cud-chewing cattle.

Starting in the next academic year, the cattle, which arrived last month and have names like Ground Round and Honey Bear, will be fed by students enrolled in an agricultural science class. Then, when the animals are fat enough, they will be fed back to their caretakers — as beef patties on lunchroom trays.

Hagerstown, population 1,769, is like many rural communities confronting the cost of population decline and concerns that local agricultural ties are disappearing. Small-town schools across the country are turning to hands-on agricultural classes that also supply cheaper, healthier food for their cafeterias. A high school in Montague, Mich., has student-raised chicken on its menu. Another, in Willits, Calif., serves campus-bred pork. Pupils in other districts throughout the Midwest are growing crops or garden produce for a letter grade before eating the fruits of their labor when the lunch bell rings.

“As budgets keep getting cut, we keep looking to more creative ways,” said Stefonie Sebastian, education specialist at F.F.A., a national agriculture education group that was once known as Future Farmers of America and that has supported such projects. “Agriculture programs used to be on the chopping block. Now we’re seeing it as a way to get things done at the school.”

The postrecession struggle of rural towns is as common around here as rows of corn. Farming and manufacturing jobs are disappearing. Residents move away in a steady, debilitating trickle. Few return.

Sixty miles east of Indianapolis, schools in Hagerstown have lost enough students since 2010 to cause a significant drop in per-pupil funding from the state. Teachers have been laid off, and a pre-engineering program was axed. The high school pool was drained in spring and summer to save on the cost of heating and chemicals, a compromise alternative to closing it permanently.

School officials say the Hagerstown cattle program — informally known as “Where’s the Beef?” — is expected to save at least $2,000 in annual cafeteria costs and expand vocational training.

“We’ll have more meat than we’ll be able to consume,” said Mark Childs, the principal at Hagerstown Junior-Senior High School, which will sell its extra beef. “We supply our own.”

According to a United States Department of Agriculture report released this month, there was a slight uptick between 2007 and 2012 in the number of new farmers under the age of 35, but over all, the number of farmers shrank by nearly 20 percent. The total number of farms also fell, by more than 100,000, as large food producers expanded and land prices rose — putting more pressure on the small family farm.

Hagerstown has perhaps as good a chance as any place to buck the broader trend. Amish dairy farmers have arrived from Pennsylvania in recent years, with more on the way. Teachers at the high school, which has offered agricultural courses since 1934, tend crops and livestock on the side for extra income. Some students wear F.F.A. jackets as if they were sporting varsity letters; they speak with pride about the local chapter’s soil-judging team, which last year fell just shy of qualifying for nationals.

But even here, residents are losing touch with the land. According to federal data, Wayne County, which includes Hagerstown, lost 89 farms between 2007 and 2012, about a tenth of its operations.

“Most of our students come from in town,” said Macy Felton, a senior in high school. “They can point out that’s a cow, but they wouldn’t know what to do with them.”

In a district of roughly 1,000 students, the exodus of 66 students from Hagerstown since 2010 was a blow to the district’s budget. William Doering, the superintendent, set out to close a spending gap a couple of years ago, calling for $350,000 in cuts — five educators lost their jobs — and asking staff to come up with ideas to save more money.

It was Nathan Williamson, an agricultural mechanics teacher, who presented the idea of a cattle class to the school board last year. While instructing students on things like farming techniques and veterinary science, the course would supply enough meat to pay for itself and then some, Mr. Williamson told the board, replacing 5,000 pounds of hamburger patties that the district was purchasing at $3.30 per pound.

“Right now, beef prices are going through the roof,” he said in an interview recently. “We’re saving money each day those cows are out there.”

In lieu of a classroom, students built a fence around 10 acres of school land. The district is still looking to hire a new teacher to run the cattle course, which will be open to sophomores, juniors and seniors. If all goes as planned, the first herd of six Angus cross and one Hereford — bought with donations from local banks and members of the community — will be slaughtered this fall with the help of a butcher who volunteered to stock school freezers. Extra meat will be sold, and the money will go toward buying more livestock.

Garrett Blevins, a junior who is eager to take the class, said he was proof that students with close ties to their food supply were more likely to consider careers in agriculture. The son of a nurse and a carpenter, he had no farming background when he joined the local F.F.A. chapter last school year. “Now it’s my life,” said Garrett, who hopes to study animal science at Purdue University.

“There are kids out there who would never experience agriculture until they join these programs,” he added. “Once they do, it will open up a whole new world.”

But even supporters admit the plan could backfire. What if the cows get loose or die? What if the price of beef plummets? What if pupils grow attached to their assignment and cannot stomach the sight of Honey Bear between two hamburger buns?

Students in Hagerstown shrug when asked if the class might produce more vegetarians than potential ranchers. Mr. Williamson, who works 400 acres of crops at home when he is not teaching, said no lesson plan about farming would be complete without a little risk.

Article

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Haiti leader names group to oversee elections

Washington Post
Associated Press, May 6
Write Evens Sanon

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — President Michel Martelly announced Tuesday he has appointed a new council to oversee Haitian legislative and local elections that are two years overdue, an important step to organizing a vote whose tardiness has frustrated many.

In a late-night address on national television, Martelly said he was striving to hold the elections “no matter what” while trying to meet the demands of opposition lawmakers with whom his government has been at odds.

“I fought for the change that today we’re beginning to make,” he said.

In his speech, which began two hours late, Martelly stressed concessions he made to opponents, including making changes to an earlier electoral council and forming a new Cabinet.

The electoral body’s newest member is Frizto Canton, a high-profile lawyer who is defending former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier against human rights abuse and embezzlement charges.

The council will include three representatives each from the executive, legislative and judicial branches.

Longtime opposition leader Sauveur Pierre-Etienne objected to the decree, alluding to members of parliament who had not submitted three candidates to be members of the electoral council.

“It’s not over yet,” Pierre-Etienne said on Radio Metropole.

Despite pressure from the United Nations, U.S. and others, efforts to hold the vote were snarled by political infighting between the executive and legislative branches. But representatives of the two sides signed an agreement to hold elections before year’s end.

The Chamber of Deputies recently approved the agreement, which proposes late October for the balloting. The Senate has yet to vote, its president saying the accord is not a legal-binding document.

Washington warned Haitian authorities last month that $300 million earmarked for the country’s coast guard, health ministry and other projects was at risk because of the tardy vote. But the U.S. is seen as unlikely to act on the threat because of its overall support for the Martelly administration.

The elections would fill 20 seats in the 30-member Senate, all 99 seats in the lower chamber and 140 municipal positions.

The terms of 10 senatorial seats are due to expire in January, which would leave the body with only 10 senators and unable to form a quorum. If the vote isn’t held by then, Martelly would rule by decree.

On-line Article