Vermont Public Radio: haiti relief efforts
Nurses and doctors from Dartmouth traveled to Haiti last year after the deadly earthquake. The team has returned to Haiti this month and a photographer and reporter from the Valley News have gone along to chronicle their work. Reporter Gregory Trotter describes what they've found.
Six months after the earthquake in Haiti, a million-and-a-half Haitians are still living in tent cities or on the streets. A Vermont-based non-profit is working harder than ever to provide uncontaminated water to the poorest of the poor.
VPR's Jane Lindholm talks with humanitarian aid workers about the mid to long-term effects of the earthquake in Haiti and what role Vermotners and outside organizations are playing in the ongoing recovery process.
Images of earthquake-ravaged Haiti have inspired kids in schools all over the country to find ways to help. At Green Street School in Brattleboro, a partnership with a school in Haiti adds a personal connection to the relief effort.
Several Vermont organizations that have operations in Haiti are trying to organize support in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake. And Vermonters from many walks of life are also looking for ways to help.
Many Vermont groups and businesses have begun organizing to provide relief to Haiti following the devastating earthquake this week.
Vermont relief organizations say there's been a tremendous response from people across the state who want to help victims of the earthquake in Haiti. For now, the groups all stress that financial assistance is the best way to provide critical, short term help.




