Help Rural Ethiopians Improve Access to Water
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Summary
This project is helping more than 30,000 villagers improve their use of existing water resources. It is rehabilitating natural springs and building wells for better access to clean drinking water.
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Received $21,047 from 196 donations from people like:
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More Information About this Project
Project Needs and Beneficiaries
Communities worldwide depend on water for survival, yet more than 1 billion people lack proper access to clean drinking water. Impacting health, food, climate, transportation and local markets, inadequate water resources and their management can lead to disease, malnutrition, poor economic growth and conflict. Ethiopias central areas are drought-prone, and inefficient use of fuel has depleted available resources, creating a chronic water crisis for more than 14 million Ethiopians.
Activities
CHF's programs in Ethiopia are training women about proper hygiene and water usage, fostering effective usage and management through local associations, and building infrastructure such as deep-wells, hand-dug wells, and rehabilitated springs.
Funding Information
Total Funding Received to Date: $20,897
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $4,103
Total Funding Goal: $25,000
Additional Documentation
This project has provided additional documentation in a PDF file (projdoc.pdf).
Resources
Why this Project is Important
Potential Long Term Impact
Better water usage can improve the environmental conditions that cause drought. Access to clean drinking water frees the women and children, who are forced to carry water from distant sources, to pursue education and income-generating activities.
Project Message
In the past we had to walk for 4 hours to get water and we still never had enough. Now we have water to drink, water to wash with, time to take our children to school, and finally time to weave again.
- (Anonymous), CHF beneficiary
When this Project was Updated
Last Updated
This project was last updated on February 06, 2008.
Date Added to GlobalGiving
This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on February 10, 2006.
Latest Update from the Field
Water User Associations (WUAs)
By Brannon - Country Director, February 06, 2008 10:07 AM
As part of CHF's participatory approach to development, we first organize beneficiaries of program activities into community-based Water User Associations (WUAs), which are utilized as the organizational framework around which to structure all activities. WUAs serve as a mechanism to ensure the sustainability of the interventions undertaken beyond the end of the program.
Through participatory decision-making, the elder councils confer with their respective communities to identify the needs to improve the quality of water sources and identify the contribution from those that will benefit. Management of the community contribution to the rehabilitation, training of the community on hygiene and sanitation, awareness raising and distribution of the water purification systems, and creation of the market opportunities for the continued supply of Water Guard, becomes the responsibility of the WUA.
Members from each WUA (both men and women) participate in a "Training of Trainers" program that covers gender issues, family planning, nutrition, hygiene and sanitation, malaria prevention, and traditional practices such as female genital mutilation. CHF also recognizes that HIV/AIDS can greatly deplete the productivity and resources of communities and households, and seeks to reduce the economic and social vulnerability inevitably caused by the disease. As HIV/AIDS is such a critical health issue, the topic receives special attention in the training cycles to ensure proper understanding by beneficiaries. HIV/AIDS prevention and awareness training is conducted for beneficiaries to improve their understanding of the causes of the disease and appropriate prevention mechanisms.
A key aspect to ensuring community led implementation of a project, which will result in selfsustainability of interventions, is the drafting and acceptance of agreements between CHF and the specific beneficiary communities (WUAs). These agreements define the nature of participation to be exercised by each stakeholder. CHF views communities as both beneficiaries and program partners, and by incorporating all stakeholders in the identification, prioritization, and implementation of activities, we create local ownership of the process and the resulting vested interest in its success and sustainability.
In the last quarter, CHF: > Organized and trained 18 Water Users Associations; > Conducted 23 community meetings; and > signed 18 agreements with WUAs
In the next phase, CHF will consequently: > begin construction of 23 shallow wells; and > begin construction of 180 latrines. Attachments:
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