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HAITI LONG-TERM SUSTAINABILITY

"A platform for collaboration where ideas are turned into results and where projects are successfully advanced to benefit the millions of people who call Haiti home. . I want to work for you. We need to create a more sustainable country, improve our schools, and make public safety - a top priority. , I know what it takes to find solutions, navigate the complicated International governmental agencies, and get things done."
LIST OF ISSUES
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NEW DEAL FOR HAITI

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1. Identify a panel of engineers, scientists, economists, and policymakers from inside and outside Haiti to Identify and recommend critical infrastructure solutions.

2. Find a way to educate and employ Haitians 13% of which are unemployed a. Haitian Workers Corps (WC)-put regular Haitians to work to rebuild Haiti's critical infrastructure.

3. Create a Health Care Corps -Doctors recruited around the world to take care of Haitians. Train Haitians as the future of Haiti's nurses and doctors.

4. Create a Police force-focused on cleaning up the gang violence, but also focused on community policing to protect citizens

5. Create a fund to pay artists to create a new Haitian Identity and make communities livable.

6. Create a Mental Health Care Corps to deal with the mass stress and anxiety from the natural and manmade disasters on top of wide spread poverty.

INFRASTRUCTURE

The mission of my infrastructure plan is to provide exemplary municipal services, quality country infrastructure and facilities and to inspire community improvements that add value to the lives of our residents and enhance businesses.

ROAD

The road network, initially structured around a national, departmental and municipal meshing, is largely degraded, and for the main part in a state of extreme deterioration, having lost about 30% of its extension during the last 15 years. such as traffic  inventories etc,

ELECTRICITY

Haiti is facing two energy challenges: a broken electricity sector and dependency on charcoal. The electricity sector in Haiti is among the most challenged in the region. Only about one-quarter of the population had access to electricity

SCHOOL 

Education in Haiti changed during the 1970s and the 1980s. Primary enrollments increased greatly, especially in urban areas. The Jean-Claude Duvalier regime initiated administrative and curriculum reforms. 

CLEAN WATER

Between 1990 and 2015, the share of the population with access to potable water decreased from 62% to 52%. Today, more than half of the country's rural population still lacks access to drinkable water

WATER PLANTS

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WASTE PLANTS

Haiti's waste management system is characterized by a lack of treatment, poor collection methods and a weak legal framework. Haiti's largest landfill site (Truitier) is a serious environmental concern.

TRANPARENCY

I would create a Presidential commission on Ethics in Government and The President will oversee the money. I will have oversight on where that money goes.

 

 

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The mission of my infrastructure plan is to provide exemplary municipal services, quality country infrastructure and facilities and to inspire community improvements that add value to the lives of our residents and enhance businesses. For the Haitian people

BUILDING BACK HAITI THE COST COULD REACH NEARLY

$14 BILLION

HAITI'S NEW DEAL

Implementation:

 

1. State that when a short 5-year, medium 10 year, and long term plan 20 year plan is in place, I will seek u.s. & france to underwrite it. Funding will transition from a loan to a grant if certain benchmarks are achieved.

2. I will facilitate and be as transparent as possible a. Create a budget with items so I can refer to it and place on the website

3. I will employee someone to help oversee the progress.

4. Market the New Deal for Haiti. This is a part of my campaign for a New Deal for Haiti- Rebuild Haiti For over forty years, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has monitored the situation of human rights in the Republic of Haiti. For much of this period, the people of Haiti have faced many hardships, including political instability and violence, serious human rights abuses with no accountability, and exploitation and degradation of the country’s economy and infrastructure. Unfortunately, Haiti’s recent history has not revealed much progress in reversing this course. Based upon its longstanding experience in Haiti and other countries of the Hemisphere, the Commission considers that efforts to address the country’s current and longstanding problems will not succeed without urgent reforms to strengthen the administration of justice and the rule of law in Haiti. 

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Paid For by  Parti Institutionnaliste Team. New Deal For Haiti     

E-mail: info@haitifortune.com  Phone: 813.670.2614

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