As a disaster reporter, one of my major obsessions is data. Generation of useless data is one of the top ways that aid groups and governments fail people in need. 🧵
Following international disasters, there's always a lot of graphics and spreadsheets and "dashboards." This gives the impression of SO MUCH information. But it's generally not usable.
I've written a lot about data communications over the years, particularly in Haiti and Nepal. The same problems are here in the US COVID response. And I want everyone to understand... Data obfuscation is *intentional.*
As an example, I live in Montgomery County, Maryland. A week ago, the county announced it would publish daily COVID case counts for each school, then calculate the amount of schools more than 5% positive over a 2 week period, which would trigger the school to go virtual.
That was clear, responsible use of data they already had. They generated a spreadsheet (unfortunately via pdf) but it clearly showed RED schools, YELLOW, and GREEN. The data not only was understandable, its existence would trigger a set of actions. Great.
Immediately, the data showed 11 schools in the RED. They went to virtual learning. A few days later, the number of schools with 5%+ positivity rate jumped to 126, more than half the schools in the county. fox5dc.com/news/montgomer…
So Montgomery County officials backtracked and said. never mind, we aren't doing the 5% trigger anymore. We're going to look at schools on a case by case basis. At the same time, they *stopped* generating the list of which schools topped 5%. wusa9.com/article/news/l…
Important: They didn't stop generating the data, just the unique data product with schools in red. The data product was essentially too useful. Too easy to understand. Too clear. Parents looked at the RED schools and freaked out.
Now MoCo is generating daily PDFs of spreadsheets which only show the Daily Counts of COVID cases in each school. It's no longer meaningful data. Without personally downloading the PDF, converting it, and merging the sheets... there's no context. montgomeryschoolsmd.org/coronavirus/da…
A daily count of COVID cases is meaningless without knowing how many other kids and teachers tested positive in the previous 5 to 10 days and how that compares to the total population of the school.
I converted and merged the useless data into usable data and based on the last 6 days, 90 schools in Montgomery County Maryland have 5% or more positivity rates. It took me awhile because the PDFs were intentionally not designed to do this.
Whether schools close or not isn't really my point here... absence of usable data is a form of censorship. With COVID, Americans need to ask:
+ What are we counting
+ What are we not counting
+ Can I find those numbers
+ Can I use those numbers to make decisions
And give yourself the benefit of the doubt. You are not stupid! If the numbers don't give you a *clearer understanding of reality* then the data as presented is not usable. And that's probably on purpose.
When datasets and data products suddenly disappear... beware. As Joni Seager, the feminist geographer stated, "What gets counted counts"
Add: A reader sent me this incredible analysis. She is a teacher in Montgomery County and her husband created this awesome website from the deadend data.
I’m reading the Uvalde report on the school shooting, prepared by the Texas House of Representatives, Investigative Cmte. static.texastribune.org/media/files/d0…
On paragraph 3 and I’m already livid. They start by blaming the teachers.
And then they blame the maintenance staff. Police are already heroes. “We warned you…”
Like, I’m not a detective, but if 376 cops show up and don’t intervene for an hour… maybe start there? Or with the gunman? The gun?
This report on the humanitarian response in Ukraine is stunning. I'll tweet a few highlights. I'm not sure whether to laugh or just shake with rage. #Haiti folks will recognize these problems.
First off, these two figures. Locals are the ones on the ground but they only got 0.003% of the money. It's shocking, honestly. And I've been doing this story for a decade. We're talking about a billion dollars here.
"For the first six weeks post-invasion, virtually all humanitarian aid inside Ukraine was organised and implemented by local actors, including around 150 pre-existing national NGOs, church groups, and around 1,700 newly formed local aid groups."
Very happy to share my thoughts with Haitians via Le Nouvelliste | Aide : sur chaque million annoncé, dix mille dollars iront aux organisations locales lenouvelliste.com/article/231407…
Les clients des organisations d'aide internationale ne sont pas les bénéficiaires de l'aide, leurs clients sont les donateurs. Même si les bénéficiaires de l'aide n'aiment pas l'aide, ils peuvent continuer à la donner tant que les donateurs continuent de leur donner de l'argent.
Il n'y a pas d'incitation au changement sur le marché. Ils continueront à pousser le récit de « pauvre Haïti », « reconstruire Haïti » et « reconstruire mieux » parce que cela rapporte de l'argent et les rend beaux.
The EU has released satellite imagery of the damage in Haiti. First impression is that it's very dispersed. That will be a challenge. The red blocks are autogenerated to show destroyed buildings. Not 100% accurate, a snapshot
This analysis done by NASA using Copernicus data is more detailed but you can see by all the red in the ocean, prone to false positives maps.disasters.nasa.gov/arcgis/home/it…
Links to Haiti Earthquake damage maps and satellite imagery
Folks are asking: What went wrong with the aid in Haiti after the earthquake in 2010 and is it going to happen again? I spent two years there after the quake, then reported on a bunch of other disasters. 🧵 tl;dr yes
First off: nothing that went wrong in Haiti was because of Haiti. The same/similar problems with disaster response happen everywhere. 1/n
If there's one thing that is unique about Haiti, it's that the country's only a short flight from Miami. Making it extra accessible to well meaning Americans who often deploy without the skills to offer truly effective aid. Americans care about Haiti. That's a curse, in a way 2/n
Part of the delay in allowing Afghans is how the Global North adjudicates “claims” for “asylum.” A practice that barely exists in the Global South, where refugees just move in. The north’s insistence on “vetting” is a colonial performance entirely driven by fear and racism.
Insisting that more paperwork makes us safer is ludicrous. The 9/11 guys had their paperwork perfect. The paperwork has increased over the decades, as nationalism and fear of immigrants took hold in rich countries. Asylum is a RIGHT but it’s treated now as a privilege
Afghan refugees have been running for yearssss. To the point where they just started being *returned* to Afghanistan, as rich countries deemed it “safe.” seattletimes.com/nation-world/e…