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American Red Cross Water and Sanitation Program Global Watsan Meeting Mexico City March 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "American Red Cross Water and Sanitation Program Global Watsan Meeting Mexico City March 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 American Red Cross Water and Sanitation Program Global Watsan Meeting Mexico City March 2006

2 Yohannes Hagos Senior Advisor, Water and Sanitation Mark Toy Tsunami Watsan Technical Advisor Technical Solutions Pat McLaughlin, Director WATER AND SANITATION ORG CHART Tsunami Operations Non-Tsunami Operations

3 1. Gianni BicegoSri Lanka 2. Aaron BrentSri Lanka 3. John McGownThailand 4. Martin EdeProgram Manager, Indonesia 5. Teh Tai RingIndonesia 6. Jeff JewettIndonesia 7. Jim GouldThe Maldives 8. Bigambo NandigaConsultant, East Africa ? ARC WATER AND SANITATION FIELD DELEGATES TSUNAMI OPERATIONS

4 Country/ProjectProject Start Date Project End Date Beneficiaries Mozambique: Water and Sanitation (2 nd Phase) 08/01/200303/31/200575,000 China: Ningxia watsan 06/0512/0610,500 China: Shanxi Vietnam- HE and promotion in Schools 01/0612/0710,420 India: Gujarat Water/Sanitation Project (2 nd Phase) Assessment completed Ethiopia: Zway Hadiya Water and Sanitation (2 nd Phase) 01/23/200305/14/200431,000 SUMMARY OF ARC WATER AND SANITATION NON-TSUNAMI

5 SUMMARY OF WATER AND SANITATION TSUNAMI RECOVERY PROGRAM Country/ProjectProject Start Date Project End Date Beneficiaries Indonesia: Pulo Aceh - Water Sanitation & Hygiene Promotion 7/20057/20101,200 Indonesia: Transitional/semi per., Shelter Utilities 9/20053/200977,000 Indonesia: Calang Water Sanitation Est. 3/2006 Est. 12/2009 4,000 Indonesia: IDP Immediate Needs Est. 3/2006 Est. 3/2008 45,000

6 SUMMARY OF WATER AND SANITATION TSUNAMI RECOVERY PROGRAM (CONT.) Country/ProjectProject Start Date Project End Date Beneficiaries Sri Lanka: Watsan (Wells and Latrines) (2 Districts) 12/200512/200819,600 Sri Lanka: ROTARY—School Water Sanitation (4 Districts) 3/20063/20096,500 Sri Lanka: Matara Resettlement Housing 2/20062/201020,000 Maldives: Sanitation Project (small bore system) with Community mobilization activities 2/20066/200812,789 Thailand: Phang-Nga Community Based Water and Sanitation 1/200612/200712,000

7 Modality of Operation Takes place in the context of health promotion activities. Preliminary health education is essential, including the identification of local volunteers for campaign. Participation of the community at all stages. Initial approaches, when feasible, through traditional and established leadership. Adequate time - be allowed for preliminary consultation and agreement with the water committee.

8 Simplest appropriate technology / use locally manufactured or available equipments. Parts and tools for repair should be in the custodianship of water committees. Integration with other sectors could produce maximum impact/benefit to communities. Water supply projects should be evaluated. Projects are consistent with IFRC strategy –Hardware –Hygiene Promotion –O&M Capacity Building Modality of Operation (CONT.)

9 CHALLENGES Lengthy project assessments, design, revision, approval and start-up processes and procedures. The staff turnover rate within the Movement has been high – not because of overworked delegates but probably underutilized and under worked delegates getting bogged down with some bureaucratic hurdles. The experiences of the Tsunami and other recent natural disasters all point to the need to have local branches knowledgeable and active in water and sanitation.

10 CHALLENGES (CONT.) Standards/levels of service to beneficiaries are not consistent. SUGGESTION SECTION?? In the true sense of coordination the IFRC should take a lead and assign participating PNS to fill specific needs, especially when there are many PNS in a particular country.


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