According to Roger Annis, a volunteer at the Canada Haiti Action Network, the situation in Haiti remains “very troubling”. In an interview with Straight, Annis said that a significant amount of Haitians were returning to unsafe and damaged homes as housing progress remains slow in the aftermath of the earthquake.
A recent report by the International Crisis Group has also portrayed a negative light on the housing situation in Haiti.
More than a thousand emergency camps are still spread across the country, with the majority being makeshift sites that are unable to meet international humanitarian standards.
According to Haiti Libre, a study by the Agency for Technical Cooperation and Development (ACTED showed that the general Haitian household had debts that were more than 13 percent higher than it was before the 12 January 2010 earthquake. 15 percent of households surveyed noted that house repair and reconstruction was the major financial burden facing their household, with school fees and the lack of income-generating activities being the other main financial constraints.
On 19 July 2011, Haitian President Michel Martelly announced a US$260 million plan in order to build public housing in the capital city of Port-au-Prince. However, the country only plans to provide partially subsidized public housing, instead of free houses, for the victims of the January 2010 earthquake.
"We have to ... put this country on the path of reconstruction," said Martelly as quoted in the People’s Daily. "I want to remind you that I am committed to finish the reconstruction process of Haiti."
However, Martelly will also need to plead his case with the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission on Friday if his plans are to be fulfilled and the recovery commission’s mandate is to be extended by a further year.
The Interim Haiti Recovery Commission is a panel that was set up several months after the earthquake in an effort to coordinate reconstruction projects and ensure transparency to donor nations. The panel is co-chaired by former U.S. President Bill Clinton and outgoing Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive.