Posts Tagged ‘Miami’

Haitian Relief in Motion

Everyone is trying to come to grips with the immensity of the challenge that now presents itself in and around Port-au-Prince (PAP). We are enormously relieved that Maryse Kedar, President of SOLANO, our Haitian subsidiary, is okay despite having been in PAP at the moment of the earthquake. She is a phenomenal lady, one of the most impressive people we know anywhere in the world. While her safety is great news, her recitation by email of how many good friends she has lost is both stunning and chilling. She is one of the best networked people in the country, so when she lists the friends she has lost it is a who’s-who of Haitian government and society including key UN personnel.

Our good friend Dr. Barth Green of Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami and the Miami Project to Cure Paralysis was in PAP by mid-day Wednesday. He was one of the first – if not the first –outside medical professionals on the scene. Barth has been a driving force behind the University of Miami medical clinics that have been in Haiti for years and he cares very deeply about the country. I’m sure Barth will do miracles in PAP but Haiti probably needs many more than just him.

The meeting with President Clinton is proceeding today in NYC so I am here. The only difference is the Prime Minister is obviously in Haiti rather than with us as was originally planned. The agenda would have been about economic progress and investment. Now it will be about disaster response. When I was on Governor Bush’s Haiti Advisory Group about four years ago, we identified disaster response as one of the top three priorities for rehabilitating the country. There have been several disasters since that unfortunately reinforced the priority. But no one ever imagined a disaster like this.

- Adam

Back to John:

No news directly from Port-Au-Prince but we have received word indirectly that the relief efforts are ramping up from all international sources. From our standpoint, we have received and loaded the first relief supplies on Independence of the Seas, which will be taken to Labadee and distributed through Food For The Poor. We are also in the process of coordinating additional relief supplies that will be loaded on Navigator of the Seas and Liberty of the Seas, and will be taken to Labadee on Monday and Tuesday of next week. My thanks to our suppliers and members of our supply chain team for coordinating this, specifically Tom Weiland, Laura Pullens, Lisa Guia and Don Cope. The supplies we are sending include rice, dried beans, water, dried milk and a variety of other canned items. This effort is going to be a marathon, so we will be partnering with Food For The Poor on the back-end distribution in Haiti.

I am getting a lot of questions from everyone about how they can help. I have asked them to go to Food For The Poor and make a donation. This is the best and most effective way to assist in the relief effort right now.

Finally, I am happy to say we are committed to continuing calls to Labadee with Independence of the Seas tomorrow. There were a lot of discussions about this, but in the end, Labadee is critical to Haiti’s recovery and hundreds of people rely on Labadee for their livelihood. In our conversations with the U.N. Special Envoy of the Government of Haiti Leslie Voltaire, he notes that Haiti will benefit from the revenues that are generated from each call, which is critical to their recovery. We also have tremendous opportunities to use our ships as transport vessels for relief supplies and personnel to Haiti.

Simply put, we cannot abandon Haiti now that they need us most.

Interested in helping? Royal Caribbean International is working with Food For The Poor and the Pan American Development Foundation. We encourage guests to make monetary donations to either of these organizations which are currently engaged in the relief effort. For even more information on Royal Caribbean’s humanitarian relief to Haiti, click HERE.

BY:Adam|14th January, 2010 45 Comments

The Flurry of Activity as We Approach Delivery of Oasis of the Seas

On the way to Turku. Miami to Frankfurt to Helsinki and then a two hour car ride. Along the way I almost lost my laptop and then my Oasis start up jacket. I think I have everything with me as we get ready to land in Helsinki. I’m pretty sore as my self-administered punishment for not running the 5k fast enough on Saturday was to do another 5k race on Sunday. That’s insane but at least I can add consecutive days of sub-20 minute 5k’s to my list of running accomplishments. Oh, and I crammed in a table tennis lesson before the flight as well.

Excitement looms ahead. Three of my colleagues were on the flight with me to Frankfurt. There is a profound if temporary shift in our center of gravity from Miami to Turku with delivery of Oasis of the Seas in less than 48 hours. By Thursday this force of gravity will have re-set away from Turku and back towards Miami so definitively that we are trying to figure out how to properly acknowledge the float out of Allure of the Seas in three weeks because no one from Miami will be in Finland then.

Needless to say, when I arrive in Turku, Richard Fain will have already been scouring the ship for over 24 hours. Well, maybe he will sleep for a while but I wouldn’t bet on it. Of course I am also keenly interested in the physical ship, but my interest in how the team is doing is of equivalent intensity. Tomorrow morning our leadership will host two sessions with our officers and crew. Why two? Because our crew complement does not come close to fitting into the main theater on Oasis. We have no choice but to do this twice.

(more…)

BY:Adam|26th October, 2009 4 Comments

My Involvement Outside of Royal

Occasionally I’ll take a break from writing about Royal Caribbean to comment on my involvements outside of overseeing a global cruise line.  Yes there are challenges involved in doing my day job, participating in two major “other” activities one of which I will describe here, spending quality time with my family, training intensively for running races and taking table tennis lessons.  But these are all things I’m dedicated to doing.

For the last three years I have been Chairman of the Board of Trustees of a wonderful organization named Our Kids of Miami-Dade, Inc.  I was also on the Board for three years before that, overseeing the System of Care Committee.  Our Kids is the lead agency in Miami-Dade and Monroe (i.e., the Keys) Counties for foster care and related services.  We are responsible for the system of care that must deliver quality and safety to approximately 4,000 children who have been placed under the state of Florida’s supervision because their parents were judged to be at least temporarily unfit to be parents.  We receive about $95 million per year in funding from the state to do our job, plus there is federal Medicaid funding that supports the system of care.

(more…)

BY:Adam|3rd June, 2009 4 Comments
CATEGORY: Adam's Posts