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Victims of Hurricanes Mitch and Georges in Central America and the
Caribbean will soon be getting an early Christmas from private American
businesses and individuals.
The private sector assistance efforts, already under way, will create thousands
of new homes in Central American and Caribbean nations devastated by Hurricanes
Mitch and Georges.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban will send advisors to the nations to
help coordinate the efforts by private businesses and individuals.
"I have seen the terrible toll of death and destruction caused by Hurricanes
Mitch and Georges," a HUD spokesman said. "In just a few days, these storms
left behind as much damage as years of war. American families making
contributions, business and non-profit groups are all working together to help
our neighbors recover from this tragedy, and to help them build stronger homes
and stronger communities than existed before."
According to relief spokesmen:
Four companies that are members of the Building Systems Council of the
National Association of Home Builders will provide the hurricane-ravaged
nations with about 10,000 panelized homes, a type of partially constructed home
that can be quickly assembled on a lot into a finished house. The companies
will provide the homes at a cost of just under $6,000 each the cost of
manufacture, forgoing any profit. In addition, the companies will pay for the
cost of transporting the homes and pay the cost of sending construction experts
to teach local workers how to erect the homes. For many impoverished families,
the new low-cost homes will be a considerable improvement from the severely
substandard housing they lived in before the hurricanes hit. The companies pr
oviding the homes are: Forest Homes of Pennsylvania, Wausau Homes of Wisconsin,
Signature Building Systems of Pennsylvania, and Deltec Homes of North Carolina.
HUD will send several delegations of experts from HUD and the private
sector to the hurricane-ravaged nations beginning in January. The delegations
will work with governments and businesses in the region to help them develop
innovative ways of building affordable housing, providing widely accessible
mortgage financing, improving land management and developing new and more
appropriate building standards. The delegations will include representatives of
the American Institute of Architects and the National Association of Home
Builders. The architects group will also send a separate team to the region to
assess housing and community planning needs. Many of the experts in the
delegations will speak Spanish.
International Paper and its subsidiary, Masonite, will donate building
and construction materials for homes, including paneling for interior walls, a
material that can be used in roof construction, and 1,000 interior doors.
Home Depot stores around the nation will provide more new and used tools
for hurricane victims. Last week Home Depot sent to Honduras 2,500 pounds of
tools donated by customers around the United States and by The Stanley Works ,
manufacturer of Stanley tools. The delivery represented only a portion of the
5,000 new tools Stanley is donating and the thousands of tools collected in
Home Depot's 724 stores in 43 states. After extending the tool drive through
last Sunday, Home Depot is currently working to sort, pack and ship the tools
to areas in need.
Habitat for Humanity International is coordinating donations to the rebuilding
effort.
HUD will provide $5 million in assistance to help rebuild housing in nations
devastated by Hurricane Mitch. The HUD aid is part of $125 million in U.S.
reconstruction aid to the nations.
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