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American Airlines Cuts Service to Haiti; Delta Adds Additional Flight

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti– American Airlines (AA) is cutting direct flights to Haiti’s capital from November, while Delta Airlines has announced it will begin a weekly flight the following month.AA said yesterday that from November 3, it will reduce the number of daily flights from six to four. The two that have been cut are services from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport and New York’s John F. Kennedy (JFK) International Airport.But it will continue to operate three daily flights connecting Port-au-Prince to Miami International Airport. It will also continue to serve Cap-Haïtien, Haiti’s second largest city, with a daily flight from Miami.“It was a painful but necessary decision, given the economic circumstances, particularly in an environment where the cost of fuel is high,” American said in a letter to Renet Prévilon, Director of Customs at Toussaint Louverture International Airport yesterday.Peter Vittori, American’s managing director of sales for Florida, the Caribbean and Latin America, said the cuts, which are among several reductions, “makes for much more viable economics”.However, Guy Francois, minister of Haitians Living Abroad, the government ministry dedicated to the diaspora, said the move was “a big loss” for Haiti.At the same time, the country has welcomed news of an additional Delta Air Lines flight from JFK on Saturdays, starting December 22.Delta will also start a Saturday flight to Antigua beginning on the same date, and daily non-stop flights between JFK and Kingston, Jamaica from December 20. It is also expanding its service to the Bahamas with a second daily flight between JFK and Nassau, starting October 1.By: Carribean360.com | August 22, 2018

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News, Places News, Places

In Miami's Little Haiti, one of the largest waves of evictions is currently underway

Rollin Virgile adjusts a dress for a young woman who drove from Key West to visit his store. Photo Credit: Nadege Green
Rollin Virgile walks through his store amid dozens of weddings dresses, white floral crowns, men’s tuxedo vests and baptism gowns. He greets customers in Creole: "Bonswa, koman nou ye?" (Good afternoon, how are you all?) Virgile has been in the same location, at Northeast 82nd street and Second Avenue — the heart of Miami's Little Haiti neighborhood — for 32 years. His store, Virgile's Tuxedo & Formal Wear, is a go-to for Miami's Haitian community, where customers can rent a tuxedo, robe bridesmaids or find first communion accoutrements.

But now the store must move. The commercial building and another across the street were recently sold to developer Thomas Conway, who also owns a nearby food hall and a co-working space. Conway has asked most of the businesses, nearly a dozen, to move so that he can transform the two strip malls. The business owners said Conway has given them about 30 days to leave.On a recent afternoon, Virgile shared the news with customer Daniella Eugene, who drove up from Key West to show here.“There’s a new owner,” he said. “And they want us out. It’s a shock to us all.”Little Haiti, a once predominantly Haitian enclave, has seen a burst of new development and interest from real estate investors and developers because of its central location in Miami. New projects are underway in the neighborhood, rent prices are soaring and Haitian business owners, such as those in the two buildings Conway plans to rehab, said that they are being pushed out. Some residents also believe that the threat of climate change is a factor as well.Conway did not respond to several requests for comment.Many of the businesses were operating with month-to-month leases and, in Florida, a landlord is allowed to give a 15-day notice to terminate a lease.

Pierre-Richard Maximilien, who runs a travel agency in one of the complexes, said he wrote Conway a rent check, only to have it returned a few days later with no explanation. Then he got court papers saying he was facing eviction for not paying rent. “He’s just killing the Haitian businesses and what we’re doing for the community because we’re serving the community,” said Maximilien, who has been renting his space for nine years.Maximilien said he asked Conway about returning after the mall rehab is complete and was told his rent would increase significantly. "I said, 'How much higher?' He couldn't tell me exactly."Jorge Isaac, an attorney representing Conway, said his client denies claims that he did not accept rent payments from the tenants.Several other business owners at the complex raised the same issue at a press conference in April, where they denounced one of the largest evictions of Haitian-owned businesses in Little Haiti.One of the signs in Creole read: "We want to pay. Thomas Conway doesn't want to collect."“To me, this is gentrification at its worst right now,” said Cartine Vilson, a community organizer with Family Action Network Movement, a nonprofit that works with Haitian businesses and homeowners in the area.Vilson said Miami must decide how to save small businesses from commercial gentrification to preserve neighborhood identity and the financial livelihood of business owners who invested in communities before they became trendy. “Do we count or do we not count?” she asked at the press conference. “We count and we need to be heard. We matter.”A few blocks south, a Little Haiti thrift store also called a press conference when it shuttered its doors late last year. Schiller Sanon owned the Little Haiti Thrift and Gift Store at Northeast 59th Street and Second Avenue for six years. He blamed a lack of foot traffic in the area coupled with ballooning rent costs for bringing down his business. “We wanted to be part of the well-being of the Haitian community, and it didn’t happen," Sanon-Jules said.At the strip mall on 82nd street that was recently purchased, Jean Luca is sweeping in front of the storefronts. He does odd jobs for several of the Haitian businesses. Sometimes he gets picked up as a dishwasher in one of the restaurants. He said he knows in a month or two the Haitian businesses he relies on to eke out a day-to-day living will be gone. “I don’t think the new businesses will hire me,” he said. “A person like me won’t get any work here anymore.”Some of the business owners said that they are struggling to find new commercial space to relocate.Marie-Janine Desir owns a variety store that sells clothes, lotion, pots and produce. "I can't find anything in this area," said Desir, who lives in Little Haiti and doesn't have a car. She said that she walks to work; at lunch she leaves to check on her disabled daughter, who is in the care of an in-home nurse. She said if she doesn't find a place to rent she'll have to put her inventory in storage. "That will kill my business," she said. "I won't be making any money. How am I supposed to live?"Virgile, the tuxedo and formal wear store owner, said it is heartbreaking to leave Little Haiti, the only place he has worked for 32 years. The most affordable space he could find was in North Miami, about 15 minutes away. He expects to lose some of his customer base in the move, he said.“It’s a lot to deal with as a business owner, but I have to pack up and go,” said Virgile. “I won’t be in Little Haiti anymore.”This piece originally appeared on WLRN

By Nadege Green for PRI.org | May 23, 2018

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People, Spotlight People, Spotlight

Jason Derulo Releases Video For World Cup Song

Illustrating breathtaking views of and from La Citadelle Laferrière, a beautiful castle on the northern part of Haiti, Jason Derulo (whose real name is Jason Joel Desrouleaux), released the official music video for “Colors,” Coca-Cola’s anthem for the FIFA World Cup this summer. With shots also from Derulo's hometown in Miami, Florida,  the video's intent is to bring individuals together from around the world to celebrate their respective flags and nationalities. A guitar-strumming Wyclef Jean, also of Haitian descent, also represents his “colors” in a cameo as well.Derulo said of the song that, “Through my years of travel, I’ve been able to see the beauty in our cultural differences and I wrote Colors to celebrate that diversity and be a part of the amazing energy that sports fans around the world give to their teams.”"There’s beauty in the unity we’ve found.We’re inundated everyday with negative news and it’s hard to remain positive... That’s why it’s more important than ever to unite with people in your community to try and make a difference. As a Haitian-American, I’ve become more and more invested in giving back to where my family is from. To that extent, this song is a bit of a launch of plans that I am excited to reveal soon…”

IF YOU DIDN'T KNOW...

If you aren't very familiar with Jason Derulo, here are some cool facts:

  • He is a multi-platinum powerhouse who has generated over 9 billion audio streams.
  • His breakout single “Talk Dirty” [feat. 2 Chainz] has reached 7-times platinum status
  • Want To Want Me” and “Wiggle” [feat. Snoop Dogg] went quadruple-platinum.
  • “Trumpets,” “Ridin’ Solo,” and “In My Head” went triple-platinum
  • "Swalla,” “Marry Me,” and “It Girl” earned double-platinum certifications.
  • Platinum singles include “The Other Side,” “Get Ugly,” and “Don’t Wanna Go Home.”
  • Cumulative streams continue to soar, exceeding 9 billion overall and nearly 5 billion YouTube view
  • At radio, his music has impacted 20 billion-plus listeners with a staggering 3.5 billion spins.
  • Derulo was also a featured performer for the Monday Night Football theme
  • His clothing line LVL XIII launched in Bloomingdales last Fall
  • He has a label in partnership with Warner Bros. Records and a publishing deal with Warner/Chappell Music.
  • He is an investor in many enterprises, including Catch L.A. and Rumble Boxing with Sylvester Stallone and Ashton Kutcher.

 By: Tammy for Haitiville.com | April 13, 2018(Photos from "Colors" music video)

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People People

In Little Haiti, 'Everyone Has Opened Their Hearts' Since Irma

MIAMI, Fla. – In the days since Hurricane Irma knocked out his family’s electricity, Adrian Knowles (pictured above) learned that the floor is a cooler place to sleep than a bed when it’s 90 degrees and there’s no air conditioning.“You feel kind of helpless,” he said as he ate a meal of chicken and rice on Friday afternoon - a break from the cookies and chips on which he had been subsisting during the preceding 3 days. “This is very comforting.”Knowles and more than 500 other people had gathered in the courtyard of Miami’s Little Haiti Cultural Center on Friday afternoon for a free cookout in conjunction with the Sounds of Little Haiti, a monthly concert series.“It’s been a week and most people have no electricity still,” said Sandy DorSainvil, executive producer of Sounds of Little Haiti. “Something like (the hurricane) can totally put people’s world upside down.”Hurricane Irma made landfall in Florida on September 10 after breaking records as the most powerful Category 5 storm ever recorded in the Atlantic, with sustained winds of 185 mph. By the time Irma reached Florida on Sept. 10, it had been downgraded to a Category 4 storm, packing winds of around 130 mph.While Miami was spared the brunt of the storm, widespread damage and other disruptions have been reported, including some 2.6 million people who were left without power in the immediate aftermath of the storm. One woman in Little Haiti reportedly delivered a baby in her home the day of the storm, as rescue crews were unable to reach her.Damage estimates in Florida are in the billions, while the death toll stands at 34.Friday’s event was one of several organized by local groups in the Little Haiti community since the storm. Nearly one week after the hurricane, most of Little Haiti still did not have electricity, and residents were struggling with downed trees, damage to their homes and spoiled food in the midst of Miami’s unrelenting heat.Food is in fact one of the biggest challenges for storm victims. With power out and no refrigeration, most people are forced to eat out if they can afford it or rely on local charities.In addition to the cookouts, community groups that included The Haitian American Relief Effort and Make the Homeless Smile had delivered hundreds of meals to elderly residents in their homes in Little Haiti and other nearby neighborhoods. DorSainvil estimated that the groups had fed 1500 people on Friday alone, with private donations.“We started being proactive before Irma,” said Francois Alexandre, a community organizer with New Florida Majority, who together with other volunteers has been going door to door in Little Haiti, installing and then removing plywood over windows and clearing branches and fallen trees off of houses and cars. “People don’t want to go to the authorities. Everybody has opened up their hearts but our community has not recovered as much as the state says.”President Trump approved disaster relief funds for Florida soon after Irma, though reports note more will be needed in the weeks and months to come.NPR reported that residents of Little Haiti say relief efforts there are proceeding slower than other parts of the city. Francesca Menes with the Florida Immigrant Coalition says even before the storm parts of the neighborhood were already food deserts without options for fresh food. “That's why there are organizations like ours who stepped up. Because if we're not doing it, we don't know who else is going to do it for them,” she told reporters.Alexandre echoed that sentiment. “We’re going to have these events until the lights come on,” he said, but added, “How can we sustain people for the next two or three months so that we can get our community back?”Despite the hardship, DorSainvil said that many in the neighborhood were relieved that the storm hadn’t been worse. “This is almost celebratory,” she said of the cookout. “People are uncomfortable, but no one’s grieving.”By Erin Marcus | Sep 19, 2017

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News, Places News, Places

Post-Irma, Miami's 'Little Haiti' Continues to Struggle

It’s been several days since Hurricane Irma’s winds battered Miami’s ‘Little Haiti,’ but Magdalena Ortiz still finds herself crying and shaking in the middle of the night.“I felt panic, the biggest terror in the world,” says Magdalena, a Honduran-native. “I felt in my heart that I would explode … the pain of a heart attack.”Miami, Florida escaped the worst of Hurricane Irma, but in ‘Little Haiti’ — home to a low-income African-American and diaspora community from across Haiti, the Caribbean, and Latin America — residents felt the damaging, costly wrath of winds, and still lack electricity days later, amid Florida’s sweltering heat.William Jones, upset with the unresponsiveness of his electric company, displays his monthly bill. “Answer the phone when you call them,” he complains. “Answer the phone.” (Photo: R. Taylor / VOA)For the diverse neighborhood — strong in resemblance to its namesake country, and now plush in scattered palms — a humid 32-degree celsius weekday afternoon with no electricity, and no back-up generators is wearing on an already wary community.With their stocked coolers quickly diminishing, along with all their perishables, the family barbecues can only last so long.‘We really need help’Anthony Bennett and his wife Val Williams, both residents of Miami’s Little Haiti, barbecue what remains in their stocked cooler. (Photo: R. Taylor / VOA)Anthony Bennett, like others in his community, is frustrated that wealthier neighborhoods have begun to see their lights turn on, and not theirs.“We all bleed the same, so we feel like if they got lights, we should have lights too,” Bennett said. “We shouldn't be over here suffering waiting till next week or the week after.” Passing by Bennett’s home, neighbor Haitian-native Sylvie Lucien borrowed a purple crayola marker, and penned a cardboard sign asking for assistance.“We have newborn babies and disabled elderly...we desperate,” Lucien read aloud. “We need help. We really need help.”For Lucien, the personal financial struggles she endures began long before Irma. But the passing of a hurricane, she says, reveals a devastating reality: if it were worse, she might not have survived.“You can't go nowhere,” Lucien said, frustrated. “We were going to stay here and die because where can you go with no car, and nobody picking you up?”Kenneth Graham can’t grasp the costs he will face to repair water leaks and the broken fence around his property. His biggest concern, however, is lack of electricity in the neighborhood, for the sake of his newborn daughter. (Photo: R. Taylor / VOA)Ortiz, on the other hand, says she and her husband had a choice, but decided to stay and not risk separating from their pet dog. Next time, she admits, the decision will be easier.“I couldn’t handle it again,” Ortiz said.By: Ramon Taylor | September 13, 2017
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News, Tech News, Tech

Haitian Airline Sunrise New Routes to Orlando and Miami

A community that works together and invests in each other grows togetherA few month ago I met Pascal and Samuel at Sunrise office to discuss collaborating on a few projects between our respective Company. It was the first time I heard about Sunrise initiative to explore new routes, but this time, it will be in the states; specifically in Orlando and Miami. The news was confirmed by their head of Marketing during an event at NH Haiti El Rancho hosted by Haitian-Benelux Chamber of Commerce.On August 25, 2017, the official Facebook page of the company announced the date of the inaugural flight, as well as the price of their round trips. A critical step and an amazing accomplishment for the Haitian Airline, which started with two small planes that are still serving Cap-Haitien and Port-au-Prince route. While this is a huge success for the Haitian company, we need to support them for them to stay in business.A community that works together and invests in each other grows together; and the company promises to remain competitive on the market. They make it their mission to continue to provide excellent customer service and competitive prices. This moment reminds me of the first AA flight in my hometown (Cap-Haitien), I was excited that I did not sleep in fear of missing out on history. History is once again happening, and we hope you will be part of it.According to the CEO, the mission of the company is to become the premier regional airline operator in the Caribbean by developing a cohesive route network in an efficient, cost-effective, and safe environment. They want to leverage success and profitability through a streamlined and innovative approach to growing the footprint of Sunrise Airways. On top of the Miami and Orlando routes, the company is looking forward to adding Turks and Caicos, Jamaica, Curacao and more.By Davidson Toussaint | August 25, 2017

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Music Music

Haitian artist, Zoey Dollaz drops 'M'ap Boule' EP

Zoey Dollaz, the Haitian artist and Freebandz signee unleashed his EP M'ap Boule.The new EP's title is Haitian creole slang for “I'm Chillin" but technically means "I'm Burning".  The EP's title and cover art couldn't be more fitting,  Zoey is on FIRE!!!. Executive produced by Future (who also appears on two songs) and featuring the likes of Chris Brown, Casey Veggies, A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie and other hip-hop top dogs, M'ap Boule is already generating buzz online, and deservedly so.Through seven tracks, the EP explores trap, R&B, reggae and even Asian-tinged sounds, ruminating on love and success in 2017. Take "Post & Delete," the Chris Brown-featuring track on which Dollaz muses, "Shawty got all in her feelings, told her I ain't with the Instagram/ Little mama when we chillin'/ I ain't down with the filmin'/ No Snapchat or no Periscope/ You can do that shit but not by me though." A new version of Dollaz's 2016 hit "Bad Tings," featuring new verses from Future and Tory Lanez, is sure to be another standout.M'ap Boule comes right on the heels of the Miami rapper's mixtape Nobody's Safe, which dropped in May. Now, he's hitting the road with Future for select stops on his labelmate's HNDRXX Tour, alongside other big names like Ty Dolla $ign, Post Malone and Lil Yachty.Stream M'ap Boule in full below, and look out for more from this up-and-comer.source: Billboard.comby Tatiana Cirisano

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