Miami.– A federal agency came to South Florida on Friday with a $170 million budget to find local groups to help them rebuild Haiti.
South Florida, home to the country's largest Haitian population, was the first of several stops the U.S. Agency for International Development plans to make. USAID sent $45 million in food aid to Haiti after riots broke out in April.
Friday's meeting, held at the Sant La Haitian Neighborhood Center, is the agency's first attempt since then to work with Haitians in the United States to create more self-sustaining economic development in Haiti.
"Emergency food is not what we want to talk about," said Jose Cardenas, acting administrator of USAID's Latin American and Caribbean bureau, at the forum. "We're promoting long-term growth so we don't have to lurch from crisis to crisis."

This is the main problem with all these "aid packages". They seek to help by using the same people who have caused and extended the problem to begin with. You give them money to solve their problem and they just squander it on "pet projects" that have already proven to be insufficient and inadequate
Set a series of objectives for each segment of the "aid" and look for the effects of that segment before releasing the next segment. Only by periodic allocation, defining the desired results of that allocation, and insisting that the objectives of the allocation be met can any "aid program" be effective. To do otherwise is to merely perpetuate and exacerbate the endemic corruption that always accompanies these programs.
Demand positive progress or cut them off and save money.
TexasBill