We hire people primarily through the Haitian Red Cross. When we put our plans in place, the construction crews are all Haitian; the supervisors are all Haitian. We also get the communities involved in the construction. We select people from their own communities to do the digging of the trenches for their own homes.
The community is very much involved. We mobilize the communities with volunteers who go into communities to find out whose houses were destroyed. We send technical teams out to do the assessment. Once the technical teams say Mr. Dewar's house has been destroyed, we check Mr. Dewar. Is he one of the most vulnerable people? Is it a single family...monoparentales ?
We have a whole process, first of all, going into the communities, identifying who are the most vulnerable and whether their homes have been destroyed. This is a group of volunteers who go out and who are paid a slight amount of money. Then we have groups of technical expertise—engineers—and all of them are Haitian. They go into the communities to do an assessment of the land, to see where the debris needs to be cleared.
Then we have the crews who peg out the land. We have the excavation group, primarily from the community, and then we have our charpentier people who put up the housing. Then the Dutch Red Cross comes in and puts the water and the sanitation in for almost every house, depending. In some communities they share—