Sunday, 31 August 2014

Our Projects

Hi,

I thought I would give you a run down of the projects we have submitted and are working on.  John Buah, our supervisor, has been encouraging us to spend the budget so between us and Elder and Sister Panter we have done that.  We still have a few projects to be submitted but we have identified them and have costs for them.  We have a budget of $550,000 for Area Initiatives for the West Africa Area.  Because the couples were new in Sierra Leone and Liberia they were working on open projects that were left by the preceding couples and didn't write up new ones.  That gave us a lot of budget to use here.   There is also budget for major initiatives like water, vision, wheelchairs, immunization and Neonatal resuscitation (help babies breathe).  Those projects can be pretty pricey (our current water project (32 wells/boreholes/rehabs) is worth about $250,000.  We are in the process of developing 3 more water projects for 2014 but they will each be approx. 15 wells each. 

Jim has a project that he developed.  Several months ago the Minister of Institutional Care wanted to talk to us.  He told us that they have new ambulances and have trained EMTs that keep the people alive, but when they get the people to the hospitals, they have no proper Emergency care and so too many die.  Jim talked to our people in SLC and they agreed this could be a good project and to go ahead and write up an Area Initiative to have a doctor visit and assess.  So Dr. Archibald, from Idaho, arrived Saturday.  Jim was with him yesterday and today as they visited some key people and hospitals.  Tomorrow he will fly to Kumasi with an assistant to the Director of Institutional Care and visit a big hospital there.  Thursday we will drive them to Winneba to do the same.  Dr. Archibald will decide if there is a project to be developed where the Church could bring doctors and do some training to help improve things.  Dr. Archibald and SLC were quite excited about this so we will see where it goes.

I didn't get this email finished so here it is Sunday already.  Dr. Archibald left last night.  He had a good week here, except for the day he spent in his hotel room sick.  He thinks there will be a good project here.  Dr. Kaba, in Accra, will put together a team and Dr. Archibald will put together a team and they will work together and try to do some training.  The idea will be to train a team here and that they will then train others and carry it forward.   


Some projects were are still writing up (waiting for some final information) are:
1) Drilling a borehole at a school in Kumasi (850 students) so they don't have to miss school when the go searching for water.
2) Furnish supplies to repair some ceilings in a Ward at a hospital in Cape Coast.  Also we want to repair 9 sinks/counters that were poorly made and are falling apart.  Whoever built the hospital used poor materials and due to the humidity here the cabinets have fallen apart.  I wrote this project up this past week and it has been submitted to the Area Presidency for approval.
3) There are some cholera problems here and we were approached about helping with materials (wheelbarrows, shovels, garbage bins, and such) for a cleanup.  John thinks we should do this one.  Since I started this email we have received two more requests for help with cholera and ebola. 
4) E/S Panter are doing a couple of projects in Jamestown (a very poor area by the ocean) to support street children.  There is a group there that have a small library and activities for children there.  They are doing a good work so we will support them with some books and and a strong canopy for some little nursery children.
5) Panters are writing up a project to supply materials to build two structures for schools out in a couple of Villages that desperately need it.  If there is enough money we will also buy some school supplies to help them at 4 schools. 
6) John Buah has also requested that a project be done to supply some Atmit (food supplement full of nutrition and vitamins)  to children in Benin (a country nearby). 
7) Solar Panels are being ordered for a Clinic out in the rural area where electricity is very unreliable and babies are delivered in the dark or by candle light.


 
Open Projects -  (Approved projects that we currently are working on.) 

That is a bit of a run-down. There are other projects as well.  I am going to write a separate email about our project with Bernice.

More to come.  Love, The Bullocks




Sunday, 3 August 2014

Evacuation of missionaries

The missionaries are all being taken out of Sierra Leone and Liberia due to the Ebola virus.   There are about 257 in total I think.  Many will be brought to Accra and will stay in temple housing and the Stake centre on the temple grounds.  They will be reassigned, most likely to their home countries. 

Our two humanitarian couples from those countries will come here from the sounds of it and will try to complete their projects from here and also help out with some in Ghana.  

We hope they all arrive as planned.  The Church is chartering planes and last night they didn't get to leave the airport in Liberia because Ghana said they couldn't land here.  It sounds like they are sending some on a Commercial airline tonight.  The charter flight is suppose to leave Sierra Leone tonight and come here.  We are hoping it happens without any problems.  

There is no Ebola in Ghana so we are fine.  Hopefully it gets under control before it gets this far. 

Hope all is well with everyone.

Love, Nancy


Dr. Baah's Vision Clinic handover

LDS Charities has helped with this clinic a couple of times now.  Dr. Baah is a good man, doing a lot of good for the people in Ghana.  He is very grateful for our assistance and had a big party for the hand-over ceremony and fed everyone that came as well.   He had newspaper people there as well as TV stations.  It was great publicity for the Church, which is good as it helps to make people aware of us.

He presented we ladies with a dress made from Kente cloth (they took our measurements on Monday and had the dresses ready for Wednesday morning).  The men received a traditional top (don't know the official name for it).  That was very nice of him to do that.  We don't usually get such gifts and it does feel a little weird.  We were presented with our dresses and told to go change and had to come back and make a grand entrance.  I was a little worried about it but they did a good job and the dresses fit and looked nice.

Rubber tree plantations

Here some pictures of them collecting sap from the rubber trees.  It was really quite interesting to see. 
Also pictures of of high density housing in Abidjan along the river.

We came across a Scout meeting at one of our Chapels and I just had to get a picture of them.

Ivory Coast (Cote d'Ivoire)

We spent almost a week in Cote d'Ivoire.  Almost everyone speaks French there so it was great that Jim has as much French as he does.  He struggled and his brain worked overtime, but he managed pretty well.  It certainly did help a lot. 

We traveled with our vision specialist from SLC.  First thing on our arrival,  a driver had been arranged for us, and we were driven to visit a small clinic.  They essentially have nothing but Bro. Hunsaker feels like we can help them.  His opinion is 'if we build it, they will come'.  So he will write up a project and give them a couple of items for their Optometry room.  They do have an optometrist and he had very meager supplies to work with.

The next day we headed to Soubre, place about 6 hours away.  Some said 4, some said 7, but it took us 6 hours.  We rented a vehicle and when you rent vehicles in Ivory Coast that includes a driver.  I guess too many vehicles got sold, instead of returned!   He was a good driver and did a good job of missing most of the many potholes.  It was a rough ride though.   We went directly to another very small hospital/clinic.  They had requested some medical equipment.  They virtually had nothing to speak off (6 beds with mattresses and some IV stands).  We will help them out with a few things.  Our Area Initiatives must be less than $25,000.  We even added a couple of stethoscopes and thermometers to the list as they only had one. 

 We stayed in a hotel that maybe could be classed as 1/2 star -- but that was the best they had there.  We ordered pizza from the menu at the hotel and got it after about 2 hours of waiting.  Sigh!  That's Africa!   We left early for our 6 hour ride back to Abidjan.   We did stop at one point and take pictures of a grove of Rubber trees, where they were collecting the sap from the trees into little pails.    We also stopped to look at a water well and while there Sis. Hunsaker and I saw a lady with a basket of fabric so we checked it out and each bought a piece or two.  It was a good deal.  Plus the fellows we were with who took us to see the clinics bought us each a piece as a gift.  Hmmm.....     they must really want these projects approved.  ;)

We arrived back in Abidjan and stayed in a beautiful hotel there.  Nice!   At 5 pm we met with 6 stake presidents and the Area Authority Seventy at a Stake Centre and did some training on the 'member food and small animal production' initiative.  There are 6 stakes in Abidjan and 2 missions in Cote d'Ivoire.  The training went well even with the language barrier.  Some knew English and could help translate back and forth but again, Jim did pretty good.

Sunday we attended a Sacrament Meeting in an open pavilion-type structure.  It was great.  The weather right now is quite pleasant -- not too hot, but not cold.

Dr. & Sis. Hunsaker left after Church to fly back to Accra and then connect to their SLC flight.   We stayed in Abidjan to look at another project request to help a Literacy group that are teaching adults, that have never learned, to read and write.  We were impressed with what they are doing and will write up the project and give them some books, exercise books and supplies. 

We also met with an assistant to a  Government official about the needs in Cote d'Ivoire that they are focusing on.  He wasn't a lot of help and next time we need to arrange with at least a month's notice to meet the right person.  O well.

We met again with the fellows from the Clinics and had a nice chat with them.  They brought us more gifts; an African outfit for Jim (pants and matching shirt) and brought me a dress that I like.  I need to lose 10 lbs. though to wear it.  O yeah, and Jim's outfit comes with a little hat too!  hehe

The Mission President for the newly formed 2nd mission there came and picked us up at the Hotel and took us to the mission office.  We had a satellite phone for him and Jim helped him get it set up and make his call to SLC.  Each mission has a satellite phone for emergency purposes and Jim is in charge of making sure they all make their test calls to SLC twice a year.  They report to Jim when the call has been successfully made.

We headed back to Accra on Wednesday and have been busy catching up at the office and starting to write up the projects.  Nothing has been done in Cote d'Ivoire so we hope to be able to help them out there.  We don't have a humanitarian couple there.   

It is a beautiful country.  It is rainy season so everything was green and lush.  Thick forests/jungles.  They have rubber tree plantations and cocoa plantations.  Lots of gardens and maize growing right now.  The people are wonderful, just like everywhere else here. 

I am sending some photos of the countryside, potholes, bigger potholes, and biggest potholes.  Hehe!    But, just to show that there are some good roads I included a photo of a freeway in Cote d'Ivoire that runs from Abidjan up to the border of Burkina Faso.  It was great and we got to drive on it for a couple of hours as we traveled to Soubre.  The other four hours were not so nice.