Time Magazine Jan 16, 2010
By Brian Walsh
At 7.0 on the Richter scale, the earthquake that hit Haiti on Jan. 12
was strong, but hardly record-breaking — very similar, in fact, to a
7.0 temblor that hit the San Francisco Bay area in 1989. But that's
where the similarities end. The 1989 San Francisco quake left up to
12,000 people homeless and killed 63. The 2010 Haiti quake, however,
will likely make over a million people homeless, and its death toll
could be 50,000 or much higher. (Read a TIME reporter's account of the devastation in
Haiti.)
The wealthy Bay Area, accustomed to seismological instability, had
good — and enforced — building codes, and well-supplied emergency
personnel capable of responding to the disaster immediately. Haiti, the
poorest country in the western Hemisphere, had nothing — what building
codes it had were unenforced, police and other emergency personnel were
almost nonexistent and many of its people were already in ill health.
"Haiti was totally set up for this catastrophe," says Cameron Sinclair,
co-founder of Architecture for Humanity, an NGO that has worked in
Haiti. "I was amazed there wasn't even more destruction."
Haiti was, quite literally, a disaster waiting to happen, and its
fate shows that in the 21st century, even more than in the last, the
toll of a natural catastrophe is less a matter of the power of the storm
or earthquake than the state of the people who suffer it. That means
that a long-term priority for rebuilding — and rebuilding stronger —
will be the building stock itself, because that makes the difference
between life and death in a temblor.
"Earthquakes don't kill people," says John Mutter, a seismologist and
disaster expert at Columbia University's Earth Institute. "Bad
buildings kill them." And Haiti had some of the worst buildings in
world. There are building codes, but in a country that has been ranked
as the 10th most corrupt in the world, enforcement is lax at best. The
concrete blocks used to construct buildings in the capital are often
handmade, and are of wildly varying quality. "In Haiti a block is maybe
an eighth of the weight of a concrete block that you'd buy in the U.S.,"
says Peter Haas, the executive director of the Appropriate
Infrastructure Development Group (AIDG), an NGO that has worked on
buildings in Haiti. "You end up providing buildings quickly and cheaply
but at great risk." (See
how to help the earthquake victims.)
It was the people of Port au Prince who ended up suffering those
risks, as the earthquake caused buildings to collapse and pancake,
crushing those living within. Nor was it only the slum housing, where
many of the capital's more than 2 million people live, that failed.
Buildings housing international personnel — including luxury hotels and
the headquarters of the United Nations mission to Haiti — also
collapsed, adding to the death toll and robbing survivors of what could
have been secure shelter after the quake. "A real huge missed
opportunity in Haiti was the fact that even buildings built and occupied
by foreign agencies didn't stand up," says Brian Tucker, the president
of GeoHazards International, a non-profit that works to reduce
earthquake risk. "Imagine the symbolism that would have represented if
those buildings had remained standing amid all the rubble."
Even as the initial search and rescue continues, the immediate need
is for structural engineers to examine damaged buildings that are still
left standing and determine whether they're safe for habitation.
(Survivors are still sleeping in the streets of Port au Prince in part
because they're afraid — rightfully so — that the remaining structures
could still collapse.) AIDG, together with the medical group Partners in
Health, is already sending volunteer structural engineers across the
border from the Dominican Republic to do safety analyses on existing
buildings. "We want to take a look at what is standing and what might
still collapse," says Haas. "We'll begin to figure out what the
reconstruction plan could be." (See
TIME's exclusive photos from Port-au-Prince.)
But reconstruction can't just be a matter of returning to the
benighted status quo — that would just put the city at the risk for
another major disaster down the line. Instead, the recovery effort will
need to provide Haitians with houses, hospitals and offices that can at
least resist mid-power quakes like this one, and which could provide
protection from the island's many other natural threats: floods,
hurricanes and mud slides. And it has to be affordable — in the short
term, at least, Haiti will only become poorer. "It would be
unconscionable to turn Port au Prince back to the way it was," says
Mutter. "You have to use this as perverse chance to build back better."
The good news is that there are ways to build pre-fab housing that
can be tougher and more resistant to quakes — along with putting into
place programs that prepare people for how to deal with quakes and other
disasters. GeoHazard International has been helping with just such a
program on the southwestern coast of the Indonesia island of Sumatra,
which was among the territory devastated by the 2004 tsunami. For that
to work in Haiti, the country will need aid money, and will need it for a
while — Tucker argues that 10% of the money donated to Haiti should be
allocated for long-term disaster preparation and mitigation. "This is
going to be a long-term commitment," says Dennis Mileti, the author of
the book Disasters by Design. "We need to keep this in the
public's eye." Otherwise, 10 or 50 to 100 years from now, we'll be back,
standing in the wreckage once more.
See
TIME's complete coverage of the Haiti earthquake.
Original Article available at:
http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1953379_1953494_1954338,00.html
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