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Clinica Verde Meets in Granada

On Nov. 13, Clinica Verde holds its third annual meeting of the board in Granada, Nicaragua. Attending will be our complete board of directors, and many of their spouses, representing three continents. We’ll review our progress in the past year and our strategy for the coming year, meet in committees to discuss and brainstorm the challenges ahead, visit our land site, convene with leaders in the community where Clinica Verde will operate, and spend some time with the children and families who remind us why all of our hard work matters.

No doubt there is a lot of hard work ahead. Refining the clinic design itself is important detail work – making sure that we’ve thought through well the particular uses, cultural considerations and possibilities for sustainable technologies. We want to progress at a steady forward pace, while not overlooking elements that will improve the function and ambiance of the clinic. The medical committee is delving deeper into the work of staffing, administration and operation. And we continue to put effort behind getting the word out about our exciting work and garnering support around the world.

But also at our meeting, we’ll be acknowledging all of you – the people who have made Clinica Verde happen. Each one of you is vital to this project. You will be forever linked to the good work of bringing health and hope to women and children in need. You were willing to take a chance on something big because you care about others in the world. And I think that makes each of you pretty cool and amazing. So, thank you for helping us get to where we are. We hope you stay with us on this incredible journey for many years to come.

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Clinica Verde Meets the Phelps Challenge!

U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson and Joseph Phelps

On Friday, Sept. 11, 2009, at a private reception held at Joseph Phelps Vineyards in St. Helena, California, we announced that Clinica Verde had met Joseph Phelps’ $150,000 matching grant challenge to help us complete construction of our clinic in Boaco, Nicaragua. Congressman Mike Thompson, above left, was on hand to hear the announcement and greet Joe Phelps (right). We were so honored by the attendance of our esteemed U.S. representative and his awesome wife Janet, and will be forever grateful to Joe Phelps for his compassionate leadership and commitment to our work.

Only $80,000 to go to be able to complete clinic construction! Thanks to our hard-working board of directors and amazing supporters for taking this journey with us!

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Our local mayor in Boaco: Hugo Barquero

Mayor Hugo Barquero

“I believe Clinica Verde will help solve some of the health problems in the city of Boaco and its surroundings, especially for women and children, who are the must vulnerable. Even though we have a hospital in Boaco, donated by the Japanese, the general healthcare here is precarious. Neither the Health Centers nor the hospital provide medicine and the services are terrible. I have seen recent reports which indicate that the health of the people of Boaco has been decaying continuously.  I’m very excited about the project and Clinica Verde has my full support.”

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Latest picture from the land site!

Boaco land site

Here’s the latest pic of the land site from Project Manager Johny Siman. The site has been excavated and cleared and the soil replaced with select material, which will provide a better foundation for the building. We’re waiting for our Nicaraguan architect, Alfredo Osorio, to finish up his final drawings so we can put the next stage of work out to bid.

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Our Nica architect comes to Napa Valley

 

Nicaraguan architect Alfredo Osorio

This past weekend, Clínica Verde hosted Nicarguan architect Alfredo Osorio for a meeting in the Napa Valley. Osorio is our partner in Nicaragua – a fascinating, elegant man who has stories to tell about many of the greats in his field: Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Kahn, Calatrava. Osorio recently designed the new U.S. Embassy in Managua, and has designed a plan for the city of Managua that he’s been pursuing with the current Nicaraguan government. His history is long and colorful, and we’re lucky to have him on our side.

Osorio was here primarily to participate in design meetings with our U.S.-based architect Bill Boyd, our project developer Peter Stanley, Nica project manager Johny Siman and other board members. He’s a guy who cuts straight to the center of a problem, with simple, commonsense solutions. Over two days, the design team met to further refine our plans in anticipation of a break-ground date of this spring.

But we also showed Alfredo a couple of highlights in the Napa Valley. The most memorable was a visit to the winery Frog’s Leap. Founded by John Williams in 1981, Frog’s Leap is located among 130 acres of vineyards in Rutherford. They produce 60,000 cases of hand-crafted Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, Zinfandel, Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon and Rutherford. It’s beautiful, the wine is superb and well-priced, but there’s a lot more to Frog’s Leap that makes it something to applaud and admire.

Frog’s Leap grows all it grapes organically, in addition to cultivating an on-site organic vegetable garden. And, in February of 2005, Frog’s Leap became 100% solar powered. One thousand photovoltaic panels collect sunlight that is then converted to a clean and renewable energy source. Its hospitality center is LEED-certified – green certification that is the gold standard in the environmental building industry. Our tour at Frog’s Leap was excellent, leaving the whole team inspired to work towards our own solutions of sustainability for Clinica Verde.

If you’re ever in the area, be sure to check out Frog’s Leap. You can read more about the winery here: Go to Frog’s Leap.

I’ll leave you with Alfredo’s words upon his return to Nicaragua: “Thank you for having the privilege to know so many noble people and the magnificent beauty and tranquility of Napa. I am so grateful to you that I do not have enough words to express it, but it is deep within me. I will never forget this trip.”

Vicky Stanley, Johny Siman and Bill Bylund

Solar panels @ Frog's Leap

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Meet our Nicaraguan architect: Alfredo Osorio

Architect Alfredo Osorio

Nicaraguan architect Alfredo Osorio is our “man on the ground” in Nicaragua. Here (right), Alfredo meets with Clínica Verde architect Bill Bylund and project director Peter Stanley. Recently, Osorio answered a few questions for us about his involvement with our project.

Tell us about your career ­– how long you have been working, highlights and major accomplishments.

I have been practicing architecture and engineering since graduation at Tulane University in 1956. Since then I have continued studies obtaining a Master’s in Architecture and Master of Masters, equivalent to a Doctorate. I also studied structural engineering and business administration in Paris, France. I have an ample and large architectural practice, having been the architect for the best buildings in Nicaragua. In this last year I completed the Embassy Building of the Netherlands, and the Embassy building of the United States of America. I have just finished the design for the new American Nicaraguan School. Presently I am the candidate for doing the urban redesign of the City of Managua. So far, I believe I am the only candidate. I could tell you more but I am afraid of sounding a little boastful.

Tell us about your career ­– how long you have been working, highlights and major accomplishments.

I have been practicing architecture and engineering since graduation at Tulane University in 1956. Since then I have continued studies obtaining a Master’s in Architecture and Master of Masters, equivalent to a Doctorate. I also studied structural engineering and business administration in Paris, France. I have an ample and large architectural practice, having been the architect for the best buildings in Nicaragua. In this last year I completed the Embassy Building of the Netherlands, and the Embassy building of the United States of America. I have just finished the design for the new American Nicaraguan School. Presently I am the candidate for doing the urban redesign of the City of Managua. So far, I believe I am the only candidate. I could tell you more but I am afraid of sounding a little boastful.

What attracted you to the project Clínica Verde?

I am attracted to Clínica Verde for being such a charitable and good group of persons dedicated entirely to the welfare of humanity and at the same time the deep concern for the welfare of our planet.

Why is Clínica Verde important in your country – and how can you see it being a model for the world?

Clinca Verde, in my opinion, will be the cornerstone of the type of construction and services very badly needed in our country. It is my hope that it could be a paradigm of new Nicaraguan government construction in the field of medicine and popular health services. Naturally, once an example such as Clínica Verde becomes known, then its influence could spread to other regions of the world.

What is your personal vision for Clínica Verde’s sustainable clinic?

Clínica Verde has all the potential to be a sustainable entity to bring health and care to the poor people of Boaco, integrating local civil leaders to continue with the task of keeping it up and maintaining it.

Support Clínica Verde.

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Clínica Verde: Coming Soon!

 

Our land in Boaco.

Our land in Boaco.

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Buy Gifts from VivaTerra = Help Build Clínica Verde

 

We’re happy to announce that VivaTerra has partnered with Clínica Verde to help us bring health and hope to families in need. Through December 5, for every purchase you make over $100 you will get a 10% discount and Clínica Verde gets 10% of the purchase price. If you’re not familiar with VivaTerra, you should be. It’s a beautiful catalogue and website that sells elegant, eco-friendly goods that reflect a commitment to sustainable resources. 

This is a great way to get a start on your Christmas shopping. As the directions on the link indicate, just enter the code GCV118 in the promotion code box to purchase gifts through Clínica Verde’s partnership. You’ll find great ideas for your wife or girlfriend, friends, family and colleagues – and give back in the process. 

I love their stone vases and candle holders, recycled glass dinnerware, slab wood cutting boards, silk fleece throws, and root of the earth bowls. There are many things that will be on my Christmas list!

A million thanks to VivaTerra for being a leader in private-nonprofit partnerships that seek to do well by doing good in the world.

 

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Ecosalon interview with Susan Dix Lyons

The green gathering blog ecosalon recently featured an article on Clinica Verde. You can read it here:

“A Model for Eco-Oriented Community Health Care.”

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Why Nicaragua?

People often ask us, “Why Nicaragua?” The answer to that, in truth, begins in the 1970’s. My grandfather, a journalist, traveled to Nicaragua with my grandmother and became friends with members of the press in that country during the Somoza dictatorship, when newspapers were routinely censored and journalists often lived under the threat of death. As chairman of the Freedom of Information Committee of the Inter-American Press Association (and, later, its president), my grandpa worked throughout Latin America to advocate for and uphold the values of a free press. I grew up hearing about these stories as the background to Sunday meals, with copies of Spanish-language newspapers common in my grandparents’ home in small-town Ohio.

My first job out of college was at the Tico Times in San Jose, Costa Rica, an English-language newspaper operated by the wonderful Dyer Family – Richard, and his daughter Dery (who still runs the paper today). During that post-college year, I traveled to Nicaragua for the 1990 presidential election between Daniel Ortega (Nicaragua’s current president) and Violeta Chamorro. Those few days I spent in Nicaragua left a powerful impression on me.

Some 15 years later, my husband and I, now living in California, met Jake Scheideman, the owner of a bike shop in our town who was involved in humanitarian work in the village of Empalme de Boaco, Nicaragua. Jake and his group had – and has – accomplished great things. What began with the dream of creating a baseball field for this dusty, impoverished town, led to the construction of 60 homes for low-income families, a high school, and now a community program for jobs and long-term sustainability. We met Jake and said, “Take us with you.”

That meeting took me further down the road that led to Clínica Verde. After my husband Tim, a physician, and I traveled with Jake’s group we decided to lead efforts to help the local hospital in Boaco. With the generous support of the Adventist Development and Relief Agency – and donations from friends and family – in November of 2006 we delivered a shipping container of medical equipment and supplies valued at over $500,000 to the hospital in Boaco.

      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We felt good about helping out (and sent another container the following year), but that experience also led us to believe that we could – and should – do more. We realized that sending equipment and medications, while helpful, would never lead to systemic change in that community. If we truly wanted to change lives, we would have to be willing to make a deeper commitment. So we enlisted the help of the Minister of Health, who connected us to key people working in the field of health in Boaco, put together a bi-national board of people qualified to get a big idea off the ground, and founded Clínica Verde.

Our vision is for a clinic that is not only environmentally – but socially – sustainable. It will be operated and managed by Nicaraguan health care workers with oversight by our American doctors and board of directors. We will provide not just outpatient clinical care for families in need, but also education on nutrition, general health and hygiene, and economic agency. You can check out digital images, floor plans and elevations on the Vision page of our web site.

In all of this, we’re grateful for the work of Jake Scheideman and his group, Developing Communities, for introducing us to the department of Boaco and showing by example that big ideas can be accomplished. We’re especially thankful for getting to know Peter Stanley, the man responsible for overseeing the construction of the homes and school for Developing Communities in Nicaragua. Peter is now Vice Chairman of Clínica Verde and key to our success.

So, why Nicaragua? Our lives led us to this path, but there is clearly a great need. Nicaragua is the second poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. It has one of the highest rates of adolescent fertility in Latin America, with almost half of all pregnancies occurring in women between the ages of 15 and 19. One in 5 children is chronically malnourished; in rural areas, that number is often 50% higher. Diarrhea and upper respiratory infections are the two most prevalent diseases in children under 5, linked to low access to safe water. In the department of Boaco and Matagalpa, where Clinica Verde will serve, there are more than 85,000 women of fertile age and more than 73,000 children age 5 and under. We think we’re starting in the right place.

               

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