Haiti: Where to find news, where to send aid

Photo of collapsed Presidential Palace from http://www.haitifeed.com/2010/01/12/palais-national-down/

Haiti was hit by an earthquake measuring between 7.0 and 7.3 on the Richter scale and two aftershocks of magnitude 5.3 and 5.9 on the Richter scale on January 12, with dust from collapsed buildings filling the air for hours afterward. The Presidential Palace and a major hospital have collapsed, together with innumerable other buildings in Port-au-Prince, people’s homes are reported sliding down mountainsides, thousands are believed dead and tens of thousands homeless. Haiti, already the poorest nation in the hemisphere, is devastated.

Where to find news:

• Haitain writer, human rights attorney and activist Ezili Danto reports on the earthquake in her blog, with frequent updates. I think her reporting is reliable.

• Democracy Now interviewed journalist Kim Ives and author Edwidge Danticat on the earthquake and its context.

• Daniel Morel has an incredible Twitter photo feed from Haiti at his Twitter account, photomorel

• Fairly continuous coverage comes from a variety of sources (NOT filtered or verified) from www.twitter.com/haitifeed and HaitiFeed.com

Where to send aid:

From the San Francisco Chronicle, these suggestions for relief donations:

American Red Cross (Reportedly has contributed $200,000 to Haiti relief.)

AmeriCares Help For Haiti. Goes to their International Disaster Relief Fund.

Doctors without Borders – not a Haiti Specific page as of this writing.

HaitiArise – HaitiArise has provided education and relief for the past six years. It’s a registered Canadian charity and reports that 100 percent of donated funds go directly to Haiti.

Haiti Emergency Relief Fund – by Vanguard Public Foundation in San Francisco. Established for Haiti before the Earthquake.

Mercy Corps – Mercy Corps’ website is devoted to the Haiti Earthquake Disaster; they’re deploying a team bound for Haiti now.

Partners In Heath – You can use the drop-down menu to specify donations to Haiti.

Yele Haiti – Wyclef Jean’s Haiti initiative to assist his native Haiti.

UNICEF – UNICEF has set up a special page for donations for the children of Haiti. In an email, UNICEF’s Alissa Pinck reports: “UNICEF’s country office in Haiti and the regional office located in Panama is on the ground and have already deployed emergency teams to assess the situation and determine what the additional emergency needs are for the people of Haiti.”

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Slowing down the blog

Look for fewer blog posts in the next three months – I’m teaching a writing course at Metropolitan State University, and have a new writing assignment on lessons learned from the recession, in addition to my regular work editing the TC Daily Planet. So … I expect to have very little time for blogging. I will continue to follow the news, of course, and may be unable to resist writing about some of it from time to time, but won’t be posting daily.

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Today – just the headlines

UPDATE: Yesterday’s city council hearing on increasing taxes on businesses along St. Paul’s University Avenue/Central Corridor featured lots of testimony from business owners about the devastating effects of adding increased taxes to the burdens the Central Corridor is already imposing on them, and a decision to postpone a decision – for two weeks. (Pioneer Press)

Today’s headlines include a renewed push for a foreclosure mediation bill in MN (vetoed last year by T-Paw) and, sadly, escalating war news from Afghanistan, Iraq and Sudan. Good news from Wisconsin, though – deerhunters shot fewer buildings this year.

I’m trying to carve out some time for a few longer posts, but no luck yet – and with heavy-duty family time (Avatar, here we come!), today doesn’t look promising either. So – read on for the headlines.  Continue reading

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Adding insult to injury on Central Corridor / Headlines January 6, 2010

from Making Tracks

The St. Paul city council will vote at its January 6 meeting (5:30 p.m., City Hall) on a proposal to impose $2.9 million in additional property tax assessments on business owners along University Avenue to pay to make the street look better after the Central Corridor LRT trains arrive. The University Avenue Business Association is adamant in opposing the assessment as one more blow to business owners already facing permanent loss of on-street parking, years of construction disruption, and other negative impacts expected from LRT. Continue reading

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Video news clips of the day: Michele and Manure / headlines

CNN names Michele Bachmann Number One “for sheer wingnuttery.” You’ll have to watch the video all the way to the end, as it starts with Wingnut #5 and works up to our own Minnesota winner.

And from Fox News, a video of an Iowa farmer who spelled out “Happy Birthday, Love You” for his wife in the snow – using manure. “The good soft, gushy stuff works best,” he told Fox. See it here.

Back to serious news tomorrow – maybe. Continue reading

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Minnesota farming, old and new / Today’s headlines

YouTube video from St. Cloud students shows farming in a new light http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LaD7krwHG_o

From grain to goats and ginseng, farming includes a variety of crops and strategies. Minnesota’s biggest farming sector is grain farming, which suffered from lower prices and from a wet fall and early snow in 2009. Continue reading

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And the wars go on

As 2010 begins, wars in Afghanistan and Pakistan continue spinning out of control, and Yemen looks like a third front. Like Pakistan and Afghanistan, Yemen has a strong Al Qaeda presence and internal conflicts. According to the New York Times:

Yemen is also the Arab world’s poorest country, with a major water shortage and 70 percent of the gross domestic product coming from oil that is expected to run out in seven years, and it is also deeply corrupt.

According to BBC, U.S. aid to Yemen is increasing from already-high levels:

The US provided $67m (£41m) in training and support to Yemen last year; only Pakistan receives more, with about $112m, according to AP news agency.

Analysts say the US has also provided intelligence to Yemeni forces, which carried out raids last month that reportedly left dozens of militants dead.

The United States and United Kingdom closed their embassies in Yemen this weekend, on reports of terror threats. The threats came in the aftermath of the failed Christmas Day bombing attempt by a Nigerian passenger on a plane landing in Detroit, which has been tied to Al Qaeda in Yemen. The embassies closed a day after US General David Petraeus visited Yemen to pledge US support for its fight with al-Qaeda. (BBC)

Al Qaeda has been growing stronger in Yemen, in large part because of Yemen’s internal problems. Yemen has a rebellion in a northern province and a long-standing secessionist movement in a southern province. Al Qaeda in Yemn has also merged with Al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia to form Al Qaeda in the Arabian penninsula. Recruits to Al Qaeda in Yemen come from Yemenis who fought in Iraq, from some who went to Saudi Arabia to work (like Osama bin Laden’s father), and from among the 200,000+ Somali refugees now living in Yemen.  (NYT)

This weekend, a roadside bomb in Pakistan killed two and wounded four of six tribal leaders who were trying to organize an anti-Taliban movement. The new year was also marked by a volleyball tournament bombing that killed about a hundred people and also seemed to target anti-Taliban militia near South Waziristan. (AP, BBC) In another attack, Ghani-ur Rehman, a former North-West Frontier Province education minister, his driver and bodyguard were killed by a roadside bomb. (BBC) The weekend attacks came after last Monday’s bombing of a Shiite religious procession in Karachi, which killed 44. (Washington Post)

In Afghanistan, Parliament rejected all but five of 24 cabinet members nominated by President Hamid Karzai. NPR’s Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson reported:

Well, certainly, I think this reflects a lot upon the relationship between President Karzai and parliament, which has been very difficult and has gotten worse as time has gone on. I mean, the people in parliament feel that Mr. Karzai plays too much to warlords, that he plays too much to the ethnic factor, in other words, to his ethnic Pashtun factor. And also, they felt that there was a reflection of bribery and corruption here in the nominees.

As the government struggles to gain some kind of control, it has turned to former mujahedeen fighters. Though the U.S. has said it would not provide arms to the mujahedeen, the Afghan government has done so. The New York Times reports:

During the resistance period the mujahedeen had forces in every village, General Daoud said. Still loyal to their parties and their local leaders, they represent an extensive network of potential fighters, informants and helpers throughout the country, he said….
The population has also mixed feelings about the return of the mujahedeen, who gained a reputation for committing atrocities during the civil war in the 1990s.

“The people were afraid of the commanders, but now they have a choice — they have to choose between the Taliban and the commanders,” said one villager, who asked that his name not be used for fear of reprisals from the Taliban who have occupied his village.

And on Monday, the first U.S. military deaths in 2010 were recorded, with four U.S. service members killed in a roadside bombing. Another service member has died of non-combat causes in 2010.

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Just saying no to unallotment / headlines

Junial Enterprises - Fotolia.com

Chief Ramsey County District Judge Kathleen Gearin ruled against Governor Tim Pawlenty’s use of unallotment to balance the state budget, but what does her ruling mean for the future? The December 30 ruling is limited to one small program and a narrow time frame, but the potential for bringing down the entire unallotment scheme is implicit in strong condemnation of this unallotment in the opinion issued by the court.

The small picture
First of all, the case before Gearin involved $5.3 million of the $2.7 billion in unallotments. The only program immediately affected is a single, relatively small program that provides special dietary assistance to a small number of Minnesotans with special dietary needs due to medical conditions. The lawsuit was brought on behalf of these individuals, and Gearin’s ruling granted a temporary restraining order, saying that the state cannot cut off funding for this program — or at least, not yet.

Besides the relatively narrow scope of the ruling, it is only a preliminary ruling, granting a temporary restraining order. Gearin ordered that the program funding must continue until a full hearing of the case, which is now set for March 1, 24 days after the legislature reconvenes.

The big picture
Gearin’s order included a sweeping condemnation of Pawlenty’s use of unallotment as a violation of Minnesota’s constitutional separation of powers. Summarizing the facts of the case, she points out that Pawlenty had the opportunity to veto spending bills and to use the line item veto to eliminate specific allotments. He chose not to do so, instead signing the spending bills and vetoing the revenue bill after the legislature already had adjourned. According to Gearin’s memorandum:

The governor used unallotment rather than calling a special session of the legislature or vetoing the appropriations bill to balance the budget. He did this after signing numerous spending bills which taken together, he knew would not balance the budget unless revenues were raised. He used the unallotment statute to address a situation that was neither unknown nor unanticipated when the appropriation bills became law. The Governors actions in this instance differed from his use of unallotment in the Rukavina case. In that situation the governor used unallotment ot protect the state from a financial crisis that was both unknown and unanticipated when the appropriation bills were signed. …
[The] Governor crossed the line between legitimate exercise of his authority to unallot and interference with the Legislative power to make laws, including statutes allocating resources and raising revenues. The authority of the Governor to unallot is an authority intended to save the state in times of a previously unforeseen budget crisis, it is not meant to be used as a weapon by the executive branch to break a stalemate in budget negotiations with the legislature or to rewrite the appropriations bill.

Procedurally, the next step is the March 1 hearing on this case. Even before that time, it seems likely that other lawsuits challenging all or some parts of the governor’s unallotment will be filed. Like the 2004 challenge [Rukavina v. Pawlenty, 684 NW 2nd 525 (Minn. App. 2004)], the challenge(s) to the current unallotment will move from trial court to appellate court. It’s not clear whether Pawlenty will file an appeal from the temporary restraining order, or will wait for the March 1 decision to appeal a final decision in the case, but the language of the memorandum issued yesterday seems to point pretty clearly to that final decision.

In a clue to the significance of the case, national media outlets, including the New York Times and ABC News, picked up the AP story.

And if unalllotment is overturned? That opens up the entire budget debate from the 2009 legislative session again – at a time when the looming deficit for the next biennium is predicted to be even larger than that of the current biennium. Gearin’s memorandum lays out the procedure:

The Legislative branch has the fundamental constitutional power to appropriate the public funds. This power is tempered by the Governor’s veto authority. Their policy differences regarding how to deal with Minnesota’s present budget situation can only be resolved by them.

Special session, anyone?


In the headlines | December 31, 2009

A record South Dakota probably doesn’t want was set by a woman arrested for driving while intoxicated. Her blood-alcohol level measured .708 when she was arrested on December 1. The legal limit is .08, and the .708 may be the highest level ever recorded. She was arrested again on Monday for DWI while driving a stolen vehicle. (AP)

Pakistan police arrested a top Taliban commander (AP). Pakistani soldiers also raided a hospital, which started a four-hour fire fight. In the end, four militants and an unidentified woman were killed, and soldiers arrested 18 people they said were militants, though hospital officials said some were staff and patients with no apparent Taliban ties. (BBC)

An Afghan army officer turned suicide bomber yesterday, gaining access to a CIA base near the eastern city of Khost and killing at least eight U.S. civilians and one Afghan civilian. It was not immediately known how many of the civilians were on the CIA payroll. (Washington Post) In addition to the civilian/CIA deaths, 12 U.S. military have been killed in December, bringing the total U.S. military deaths in Afghanistan in 2009 to 310, as of December 30, according to the Washington Post. In a separate incident, the Taliban killed four Canadian military and a Canadian journalist with their unit in an attack in southern Afghanistan. (AP)

A Somali man was arrested in November for trying to take chemicals and syringes on a plane, in a scenario similar to that of the Nigerian man arrested after setting off a small explosion on Christmas Day in Detroit. The Somali man attempted to board a plane from one Somali city to another, which was then scheduled to fly on to Djibouti. (NPR)

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Carbon monoxide alert / headlines

carbon monoxide report cover

Carbon monoxide report from MDH

Tis the season for carbon monoxide poisoning A St. Paul couple was in critical condition December 29, after being found unconscioius in their home, victims of carbon monoxide poisoning. According to the Pioneer Press, the fire department suspects that a malfunctioning boilder caused the poisoning. The home had no carbon monoxide detectors.

A new report from the Minnesota Department of Health describes the extent of carbon monoxide poisoning in Minnesota: Continue reading

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Regulating big money – and skewing the news

The House of Representatives passed “reform” legislation that fails to adequately regulate the derivatives market (though it does provide some consumer protections vis a vis credit card companies.) Why should you care? Derivatives trading is used as a way to get around regulation of the stock market, and includes the risky repackaging of debts and mortgages that led directly to the current economic mess. Continue reading

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