Sdrhcon2011 argenal
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Transcript of Sdrhcon2011 argenal
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Prefabricated Shelters: Points
to Consider
Presentation at the Sustainable Disaster
Relief Housing Conference,
Oct. 28, 2011
Eddie Argenal Shelter and Settlements Advisor, USAID/OFDA
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• NOT Housing, but Shelter
• NOT just Shelter, but “S&S”
• NOT just “S&S,” but Links to
DRR and other Sectors
• Lesson from Haiti
Session Agenda
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OFDA: Lead USG Agency for Int‟l Disaster Assistance Since 1964
1963, Irazu Volcano in Costa Rica
1963, Skopje EQ, Former Yugoslavia
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USAID/OFDA Mandate
Save Lives
Reduce Suffering
Reduce the Economic and Social Impacts of Disasters (OFDA’s “Third Phrase”)
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OFDA Criteria for Response
Host country must ask for, or be willing to accept, USG assistance
The disaster is of such magnitude that it is beyond the host country‟s ability to respond adequately, and
It is in the interest of the USG to provide assistance.
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Quick Review of OFDA Activities
• In FY ‟10 spent $1.3B (5.8% of total USAID budget)
• 73 “declared disasters” (1 every 5 days)
• Worked in 56 countries
• 250 employees in 25 offices
• FY‟08 = $550M
• FY‟12 = ???
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Some of OFDA‟s
Operational Partners
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NGOs
ICRC
OTHER UN
AGENCIES IN
COUNTRY
USAID
Other Nation
Military
HOST
NATION
SECURITY
FORCES
EU/
ECHO
US Military
NGOs
NGOs NGOs
OTHER
DONORS USAID
UNHCR
UN
OCHA
UNJLC UNDP
WFP
A Challenging Work Environment: The Fog of Relief
IOM
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OFDA Grant Funding 2003
25%
65%
10%
UN Agencies NGOs/PVOs Int'l Orgs
Not an Atypical Pattern of Recent OFDA Grant Funding to
Implementing Partners…
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OFDA Does NOT Engage in Housing Reconstruction or Development, But Rather
Humanitarian Shelter Assistance
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“Full Reconstruction” Exceeds “HA” Mandates and Capacities
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“Full Reconstruction” in Response Phase May Appear to Close Gap, But Few “HA” Actors Know How to do it, so… MORE PROBLEMS
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Transitional Shelter
• More than a tent, less than a house
• Jump-starts and re-engages affected populations in the incremental, longer-term process of housing development
• Means of Promoting DRR and Livelihoods (platform for other sector interventions), and
• Unlike other sectors, no easy handoff to development. With programmatic vacuum, all the more reason to emphasize CONTEXT and TRANSITION.
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Transitional Shelter,
Indonesia
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Back to the Big Picture: SETTLEMENTS, the
“Where?” of “Our” Mandate
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Where Settlements are located, How they have developed, How rapidly they grow, How strong their economies are, and How well they are managed, esp. in times of crisis…
Will largely determine whether they become the sites of future disasters -- and possible USG responses
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The TRENDS Affecting Settlements Are Many, and Include…
• The Future Is Urban. Global population will increase from 6.2 billion to 8.3 billion, ’03-’30; equiv. of nearly 100% located in the cities of developing countries, increasing pop. from 2 to 4 billion!
• Persistent Poverty. Over 3.3 billion people -- 48% of humanity -- survived on per capita incomes of no more than $2.50/day in 2005. The poverty level was 2.5 billion in 1987.
• Increasing Strains on Basic Social Services and Institutions
• Growing Environmental Decline, Coupled with Limited Economic Growth
• HIV/AIDS, Bird Flu, Swine Flu, Pandemic Influenza, etc. increasingly a feature of settlements
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ANYONE SEEN…
• Conditions depicted are experienced
by nearly 1 of every 6 human beings
• By 2030, nearly 1 of every 4!!!
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• Context: 2X urban pop., 3X urban land; LOTS of issues with growth
• Chronic and acute needs are merging more and more every day
• Disasters/crises accelerate and exacerbate the urbanization process, and
• How to address urban displacement?
Implications for OUR Work…
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Example: Kabul, „00-‟10: 3X Pop., Maybe 6X Area
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The Importance of Settlements
• Settlements provide context for shelter interventions
• Unit of Analysis changes with a settlements approach; no longer a near-exclusive focus on households and shelter, but neighborhoods and larger communities, and
• Change in Unit of Analysis particularly useful in urban areas.
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One Solution Does NOT Fit All
• Return to safe shelter
• Return to safe, cleared sites
• Stay with host family
• Stay in proximity site with host community, and
• Relocate to planned sites
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The Basic of a Settlements Intervention
• Shelter-led
• Multi-sectoral, reflecting multi-faceted character of context (i.e., settlements)
• Opportunistic with regard to livelihood promotion and “DRR” (e.g., rubble removal)
• Cognizant of gender, environment, local organizations, and social relations • Transitional, by linking relief and developmental concerns, and • Accountable to local governing structures
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CONTEXT, CONTEXT, CONTEXT Poorest country in the hemisphere, about
149th of 182 countries listed in the UN's Human Development Index, just below PNG
80% unemployed or underemployed
60% below the poverty line, making less than $2/day per capita
In PAP, 70% of population doesn‟t officially exist (rent, lease, squat, but don’t own land)
In PAP slums, 11 sq. m. for 6 people
Limited institutional capacities, and
High vulnerability to flooding, landslides, hurricanes, and, yes, earthquakes.
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USAID/OFDA Shelter Outputs Emergency Phase:
-- Plastic sheeting distributed to estimated
500,000-600,000 people
Transitional Phase: -- Hosting Support to est. 17,500 HHs (HA community doesn‟t track totals, but OFDA share thought to be notable)
-- House Repairs for 7,181 Families (Approx. 80% of HA community output, via 5,081 repairs)
-- Transitional Shelter for 28,326 HHs (as of 10-1-11. Also, approx 33% of HA community output)
-- Completed approx. 112% of 47,500 identified “shelter solutions” (as of 10-1-11)
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Habitability Assessment and Yellow-Tag House Repairs
• USAID/OFDA supported UN Habitat and PADF/Miyamoto to conduct/manage assessment of 403,176 structures
• USAID/OFDA supported PADF/M and WCDO to repair 3,908 houses as of 3-9-11, approx. 80-90% of humanitarian community (HC) output; will repair approx. 2,000 more houses, and
• 94,002 yellow-tag houses, but current HC plans only call for repairs to fewer than 10,000 structures.
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“CCC”: UNDAMAGED Rural House,
Mirebalais Area
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UNDAMAGED Rural House, Leogane Area
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CHF Transitional Shelter for Leogane and West
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ADRA “TS” Project, Carrefour
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Context, Context, Context!
Tents Typically Not Large Enough
Good Tents Expensive
Complex logistics could make deployed “Pre-fabs” More Expensive
Schools = Poor Shelter
Local Options are Familiar, Available, Often Inexpensive, thus Accepted.
RE-Learned Lessons Become “New” Guidance…
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RE-LEARNED LESSON:
THINK BIG, OR YOU‟LL MISS THE “BIG PICTURE”
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How Much Rubble in Haiti?
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1,000 Truckloads a Day for 1,000 Days – Minimum!
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EMERGENT LESSON
• Few want to deal with rubble, and it‟s expensive to address, so it could take years to remove/dispose
• Yet rubble is ALSO the most effective land use management tool most countries will ever have: where you don‟t clear, you don‟t build, and
• Surgical, neighborhood-based focus preferred over “clear cut” efforts; will require creative “S&S” work, like land sharing, land readjustment, and two-story T-shelters.
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EMERGENT LESSON: THINK SMALL, OR YOU
WON‟T FIT (SPHERE) INTO CITIES
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3.5 sq. m. per person is NOT
based on comfort, but is
considered “minimally
adequate” to
promote health,
privacy, and
human dignity
A = ± 3.5 m2/p
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A First: Two-Story
Transitional Shelter, Haiti,
5-12-11
• Response to site conditions and need
• Platform for DRR (structure, evac routes, and WASH opps)
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RE-Learned Lessons
• Shelter is the Easy Part; the Much Tougher Issue is LAND
• Shelter Delivery Made More Difficult with Rubble. Affected Communities Effectively Smaller in Area Because Rubble is on top of Land, and
• In Haiti, PAP alone “lost” an estimated 30% of land area, making sheltering all the more difficult. (Ravine
Pintade 18 AC/7.3 HA, covered with 120k cubic m to height of 5‟/1.64 m)
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RE-Learned Lesson: Hosting (“STEALTH” Shelter)
Really Does Work • Primarily socially defined, based on
family, friends, neighbors, etc.
• Commences before humanitarians arrive on the scene, i.e., self-selected
• Cost-effective, flexible means of sheltering
• Buys time for longer-term solutions to emerge, and
• Often transitions to permanent shelter.
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Host Family Support, Mirebalais
(New self-built shelter in family compound is on right)
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RE-Learned Lesson: Land Policies and Institutions
Are Often Dysfunctional, at Best
• In many countries, land management (e.g., planning, measuring, recording, documenting, regulating, taxing) is ineffective, and
• Policy makers know steps “A and Z”, but not steps B, C, D, etc. Problems are so complex that they overwhelm existing capacities.