Safe Water & Latrines for Village in India

project picture

Updates from the Field:

Updates from the Field (or Progress Reports) on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.com by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.

Keep Up-to-Date

Subscribe to "Updates from the Field" by E-Mail
Subscribe to "Updates from the Field" by RSS Feed

Index of Updates from the Field

Progress Report: Keelakarthigaipatti

By Laurel Groh - Sr. Communications Manager, July 14, 2006 04:53 PM

As a result of this project, community members in Keelakarthigaipatti now get their water from three tubewells capped by handpumps. The members of the Village Water and Sanitation Committee know how to appropriately maintain the water system to reduce breakage. However should a pump need repairs, the committee has the capacity to make those repairs. Additionally, to further prevent diarrheal diseases throughout the community, each household constructed its own lowcost latrine. Families were able to chose the type of latrine they preferred and obtained loan funds from a local Women's Self-Help Group. The school also has its own sanitary block for children and for faculty.

Project Activities
The Sustainable Health through Water and Sanitation Program in Keelakarthigaipatti was completed during the Spring of 2004. The project has demonstrated great success.

Since the start of the project, there has been a remarkable change in the village. As a result of the project, all houses have a toilet, and people no longer defecate in public. In fact, the village instituted a policy that would fine anyone caught defecating in the open in the village. Feces are no longer seen throughout the village, thereby reducing the incidence of water and food contamination. The people in the village now collect their water from working handpumps, and the run-off from the pump runs into a community garden, rather than stagnating as a home for mosquitoes. The garden is tended to by the children in the village, and the crops produced are sold to maintain the pumps and the garden. Many families have also started kitchen gardens which they water with their wastewater.
Attachments:

Was this report valuable...
vote divider
Loading...
Tell us why (your comments may be shared publicly).
Rules for Comments 
Comments