Operation
One Love
Hurricane / Tropical Storm Response
Last month, I wrote that I was deployed to Alaska, but because of the government shutdown and airline flight cancellations, they were not able to book my flight from our small regional airport. Janice flew to Florida for a week to visit friends while I was to be away. Alas, the best laid plans of mice and men... 12 hours after she landed upon her return, she was taking me back to the airport, for my flight to Jamaica where I had just been deployed with Team Rubicon. Jamaica, you will recall, recently suffered a category 5 hurricane with 185 MPH sustained winds (300 kph) and some 250 MHP gusts (400 kph).
It took two days to get there with an overnight in Dallas Texas at what the cool kids call the NOC (National Operation Center) for TR (Team Rubicon) where we packed much of our equipment and supplies, roofing tarps, chain saws, power and hand tools to fly out with us. We even flew our own ladders and roofing nails as supplies in Jamaica are so limited. The NOC is a large warehouse housing the command communication center to keep in touch with all the OP's (operations) going on all over the place. It also houses a ton of supplies and equipment to dispatch to resupply ongoing OP's.
While we usually respond stateside, this is my second two week international deployment (Bahamas, 2019 was the first). As usual, we were warned that ..."This is not a typical operation. It will take place in a remote, unforgiving environment with austere conditions. You will work in harsh, non-traditional settings with limited infrastructure, exposure to the elements, and physically demanding tasks".
Austere conditions? What do we expect? We are in a disaster zone where everything has been smashed, crushed, levelled and destroyed. NOTHING works. Isn't that why we are here to help? Hurricane Melissa, a category 5 storm, hit Jamaica on
October 28. The island, south of Cuba and off the coast of Haiti, is still reeling and will be recovering for years to
come. The hurricane took out the electric grid, destroyed the water
systems and devastated the food system. I have responded to many hurricanes but the damage on this one is unimaginable. I could have taken hundreds of pictures, A few are attached. The people aren't doing great either.
We landed in Montego Bay and drove to Whitehouse, ground zero where the eye of the hurricane hit. A distance of 37 miles that is normally an hour drive, took us 3 1/2 hours. This is what we classify as a people in the "High social vulnerability index". Read "dirt poor". The hurricane may have done a number on them but life here reminds me of a cross between Mexico and Morocco with rutted, impassible roads with pot holes every 100 feet, big enough to swallow your car in it. Once away from the city, you are quickly in a 3rd world country. Shopping in the few larger towns is like Soviet shopping. Little choice available but when you are ready to pay you are directed to another area to get in a line to use the only credit card machine available in the whole store. Meanwhile, other customers have to wait with their purchases until you return to collect your items and receipt. As you leave your purchases face serious comprehensive scrutiny by the door security officer.
Small hamlets along the way allowed us to see how folks live and how little is available. There are no shopping centers or large stores of any kind. To say that they live in a food dessert would be an understatement. Few cars allow them to go anywhere.
Most homes are small, poorly built with unfinished cinder block, with yards full of debris. And that was before the storm. Finding specific locations is hampered by the fact that few homes have posted addresses. Power lines are strewn all over the place, so huge parts of the country has no power. If you don't have a generator (most don't) you are out if luck. I only saw marginal interest on the citizens part in cleaning up much. Still, they are a very friendly lot.
There are few boat shipment from the US per week and with the local government mandating that 80% of it must be building supplies, roof tarps and the like, non essential item are hard to come by.
With no power available at the water treatment plant, we treated all our water ourselves assuming that it was contaminated. Water is usually trucked in and is expensive. For the folks out of town, some would find a stream or a creek and bathe in it. Down stream, people would do their laundry and at the bottom, some would draw drinking water from it... Little surprise that CLEAN drinking water is hard to come by and is at a premium. Our meals were touch and go. Breakfast was a peanut butter sandwich or a cup of noodles, lunch an MRE (Military Meal Ready to Eat) in a foil pouch. They can be heated on the hot engine block of your car. If we were lucky, "Mercy Chefs", a charity group, would bring us a hot meal for dinner. As the days went by, things got better day by day. Meanwhile, Mercy Chefs would deliver one hot meal a day out in the hills and remote areas.
I hesitate to tell you about our accommodations lest you get the wrong idea and my wife never lets me deploy again! We are usually housed in a school gym, some warehouse or a Fema emergency trailer on Red Cross cots. Here, we were in rooms at the Sandals Luxury Resort, often used by honeymooners or folks on romantic get aways. People gladly pay $7000 + a week and some bungalows (below) are $3700 a night. It is all inclusive with meals served by a butler, endless booze and all amenities. You may have seen this add for this place.
Nice, huh? My room was 100 yards from this.
At the risk of bursting anyones bubble, the reason why Sandals offered 14 rooms to TR volunteers is because the place now looks like this. Two of the rooms are to store our chainsaws, tarps and assorted tools. The bad news is that we have a dearth of tools to work with as we cannot be resupplied like we are stateside. There is so little available here....and so expensive. We are in a 4 story building, but because the roofs are all damaged, rainwater flows through all 4 floors into most of our rooms.
When operational, Sandals is a high end, opulent, truly luxurious resort designed to cater to your every whim and wish. It is purposely designed to keep you IN by offering restaurants, bars, luxury shops, a spectacular beach with all manner of water toys. It actively discourages you to leave (until your reservation is up) because it knows that the resort is a bubble of luxury in the middle of a sea of abject poverty. Out of the entry gate is absolutely nothing. No restaurants, no shops, no activities, nothing to visit or see. Why would you want to leave? A very short distance into the hills and it's all but caveman living. Yes, the hurricane made it worse but there was little to destroy in the first place.
Current Look
They are closed for 6 months to make the considerable repairs. Most buildings need re roofing (this is a big place at 50 acres and two miles of beach), all pools and water features have to be emptied, cleaned and repaired, all outdoor furniture replaced and grounds re landscaped. They have hundreds of large gorgeous palm trees that are trashed and could take years to come back so they have to go. How they will replace them is beyond me, as every other tree I have seen anywhere is even worse.
Who will want to come to an expensive luxury resort when the entrance and the entire 37 mile drive from the airport looks like this?
We are not here to help Sandals, they hired 600 of their own people. We are here to tarp roofs where sometimes there are only walls left. We cleaned up the debris at 4 schools (and tarped the roofs), and cut trees blocking access so the kids could return to their classes. When the kids return, they get fed, educated, get back into a social routine and parents can return to work. The schools we opened allowed 500 families to send their kids back to school, well over 1000 kids in all. The ministry of education told us there were 352 schools that needed tarping across the island.
Part of someone's steel roof wrapped in a tree.
Many more are wrapped around telephone poles or power lines.
They can be seen everywhere.
A classroom that needed a little love
Click above to see 5 second video
Rainwater comes off the roof into the gutter, down the pipe into the tank. The kids walk to the left to the side of the tank and...
...wash and drink the water from their hands
Rainwater comes off the roof into the gutter, down the pipe into the tank.
The kids walk to the left to the side of the tank and...
We cleaned up an area around a hospital so it could reopen. They were doing procedures in a tent on their property. There are 13 clinics in the area but only 3 functioning. We helped reopen the local police station and a community center. We focused on the community lifelines to help the most people in the time we are here. People are forever asking for help with their homes, for our tools or tarps or are just plain begging. We explain that we must concentrate on opening schools for their kids and clinics. Unfortunately, helping individual homeowners would keep us here for years. Good solid work for an extraordinary team of 24 trained people. I am so stinking proud to be with them, all type A personalities.
With the power being out, there is no phone service or internet, so we brought 12 Starlink mini satellite receivers with us. When we are down range out in the field, each team can keep in touch with our local headquarters, known as a Forward Operating Base. The cool kids call it the FOB. Two satellite phones serve in an emergency. We have a doctor, a nurse, a medic and an EMT that deployed with us. Since the medical system here is all but non existent, we also have two helicopters available for emergency evacuation. As hard as we tried, we could not get them to make a beer run for us.
An often forgotten part of a disaster is the medical side of things. Our team that deployed with us treated over 600 people in our two weeks. The hospital has patients stacked 3 deep in the hallways. Our team hands out medications, with some patients saying they lost theirs in the hurricane. When asked what meds they needed, they often say things like "It was a yellow pill". All medical records were destroyed. I removed boxes of soaked files. Some patients need an MRI or CAT scan. The equipment was destroyed or they can't afford it. Prescriptions are written but the pharmacy may not have them in stock or people have no money to pay for it. Patients with insulin have no refrigeration (no power, remember) so they keep it in a thermos with ice. When the ice melts the insulin is no good anymore. It's a vicious cycle.
The neighborhood
Service is cancelled
Our day starts at 5 AM and goes till 2 PM. The work is hard and the sun is really brutal with temps at 93 F (34C) and 92% humidity so we call it a day. Besides, when we get back the is still work to do like maintaining our chain saws to be ready for the next day. In some areas there is a curfew at night so we lay low. The buildings at this resort all suffered substantial roof damage (like everywhere), and when it rains water goes through the rooms in all 4 floors. Insurance estimates have been said to be that the damage to the resort are between $100 - $250 million. This maybe known as a luxury resort but we are responsible to do our own laundry in the bathtub in our room.
Ironically, disasters are often followed by a secondary unspoken disaster. Donations. Random supplies flood in with no one to accept, sort, or distribute them, and with no place to store them. Such donations to disaster-struck communities from individuals and businesses are always given from the heart and with the best of intentions. Yet while good intentions may fuel the everyman to donate physical goods during times of “great need,” increasingly such donations create a second disaster. When people send unwanted, incorrect, or unusable goods to a disaster zone, they create a dumping zone: A secondary crisis that will have to be solved by unknown someone's, of unknown skillsets, with little to no expertise or the infrastructure to support, all while navigating the crisis at hand. This cruel cycle is repeated after every tragedy, every disaster that pulls at nationwide heartstrings.
Broken refrigerators, dirty clothing and weird things like fur coats or high heels are of little use in Jamaica. Those who want to ensure their hard-earned dollars deliver the exact items that are needed by disaster survivors, at the exact moment they are needed, and aren’t wasted should donate cash, not things.
So what kind of person joins Team Rubicon? Click on the image above to see. (Best in full screen)
OK. Jamaica is now off my bucket list of places to visit.