Thursday 14 February 2013

Community WASH Empowers 380 HouseHolds in Kasese District



SNV in partnership with Kasese district local government, UNICEF and Embassy of the kingdom of Netherlands is implementing a 3 year community empowerment programme. The programme addresses key components of Water sanitation and hygiene at school and community level.

KALI was hereby contracted as a local capacity builder (LCB) in close partnership and collaboration with Kasese district local government is implementing the School and Community Water, sanitation and hygiene program. The CWASH is implemented in two sub counties of Nyakiyumbu in Lyakirema parish and Bwera in Kisaka parish focusing on the Kalarieke Gravity flow scheme.

The overall goal of the Community WASH component of the programme is to improve community-based rural livelihoods and development, thereby contributing to increased access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene.

 The components under this are; (Planned)
  • 25 existing community water points are functional
·         25 water user groups with YahuraYahuza - "Save and Borrow" (YY) saving and lending scheme for community financing of community-based water source maintenance system
·         5,663 HHs with access to safe sanitary facilities and practicing improved hygienic behaviours
  • 5,663 HHs with improved hygienic behaviours and safe water chain practices
Communities in Bwera S/C trying out on a hand washing machine in 2012


The activities and Results done under this include;
·         Training Karalike GFS in water policy issues. Water policy issues were discussed by the district water engineer and this meeting enhanced behavioural and attitude changes.
·         Follow up meeting on the resolutions made in the water policy training. this meeting triggered the water BOD to;
ü  repair some leakages on the scheme,
ü  repaired 5taps that had problems (Bisika tap,Mubutu tap,Mutubya tap,Tibiyaro tap and Nyamughona P/S tap)
ü  Paid some arrears of the scheme attendant and,
ü  Mobilized water users for increasing WUF from 500= to 1000= to effectively facilitate the O&M of the scheme.
·         Multi-stakeholders meeting on the operation and management of the scheme. 38 participants (10 females & 28 males) from the two sub counties attended.
·         Training tap stand communities on strengthening the O&M, introducing the ‘’YY’’ (YehuraYehoza) strategy. 259 participants (112 females & 147) were reached in the two parishes of Lyakirema and Kisaka.
·         Commissioning of the scheme and hand over to the sub county authorities. This meeting was attended by ACAO Mr. Bihanikire Godwin, LCV was represented by Councillor Bugoye sub county,Tender board was represented by Moses, in attendance were also C/man works committee and the two sub counties were represented by political leaders.
·         Training VHTs/hand washing ambassadors on Sanitation and Hygiene to be promoted to the water users.
Action points under this for follow up in Jan-feb.2012
ü  Mobilize H/H without latrines to construct by end of January 2013
ü  Follow up TPC and council of Nyakiyumbu for resolutions on latrines in the cotton belt
ü  Health assistant Bwera sub county to develop monitoring plan for sanitation & Hygiene at h/h and will be accompanied with sub county secretary for social services.
ü  Collect data on hand washing facilities by end of Jan.2013
ü  KALI to support VHTs in triggering CLTS by end of feb.2013.








COMMUNITY WASH

Outcome 1:
% of functional community water points at the time of spot check.

1.    Out of the 7 villages in Kisaka parish, 3 are not connected to GFS. While in Lyakirema, 2 out of the 8 villages do not have access to the flow
2.    Out of the 4 tap noses vandalized by the community 3 have been replaced by the water BOD. This was as a result of the follow-up meeting held in June 2012 by KALI and SNV.
3.    3 out of 7 tap stands which had been non-functional due to poor positioning on the main pipeline have successively been corrected and are now fully functional. The water BOD is in the process of working on the remaining 4 tap stands.
4.    In Kisaka parish, 7 taps are functional, 1 of them was repaired.
5.    Whereas Lyakirema parish, 3 taps fully functional, 11 partly functional and 4 non functional (25 taps)
6.    3 of the tap stands that had not been working before have been repaired by the new water BOD as a result of SNV and KALI sensitization and support.

Parish
Functional taps
Partly functional
Non functional
Total
Lyakirema
03
11
4
18
Kisaka
5
2
0
07
Total
08
13
4
25

3 of the tap stands that had not been working for so long have been repaired by the new water BOD as a result of the interactions we held with them.


% of water points with functional water user committees

During the MSP meeting on the O&M of the scheme, we found out that only 4 of the 25 taps stand committees were functional. However, 9 of these had problems of some committee members not being active, other members migrating from one place to another, while other committee members are demoralized by the un frequent functionality of the taps and or lacking mobilization platforms for the communities.

Name of Tap
Active
Sex of com. members
Funds collected
Remarks
Y
N
M
F
yr 2012
Ndanda

ü   
4
2
35,000=
Tap C/man not active
Nyamughona  T/C
ü   

3
3
35,000=

Nyamughona primary

ü   
3
3
10,000=

Kisandu

ü   
4
2
15,000=

Kato Joseph
ü   

2
4
25,000=

Ventino

ü   
2
4
   7000=
Tap on & off
Paskali/Kyaghanda

ü   
3
3
   5,000=
20 cups of beans collected as user fee
Mbinga Tap
ü   

1
5
25,000=

Namugongo

ü   
3
3
5,000=

Muduha
ü   

2
3
60,000=
Tap breaks due to high pressure
Kayibindulha

ü   
3
3
21,000=

Bisika

ü   
2
4
15,000=

Mubutu

ü   
3
3
  5,000=

Binayisa

ü   


  6,500=
Males on water committee not active
Nyakasojo Primary school

ü   
3
4
  5,000=
One teacher   member to committee
Sayuni

ü   




Kiduvente

ü   
3
3
13,000=

Kahangwa

ü   
2
4
10,000=

Byamaka

ü   




Muthubya

ü   




Benezeri

ü   
3
3
13,000=

Mithimusanju

ü   




Kanyabungu

ü   




Burahimu

ü   




Syaipuma

ü   




James tap

ü   




Total




310500=
Collections for year 2012

The water committee members have been re mobilized and revitalized during the tap stand community meetings and are awaiting training. And from these sensitization meetings, all the 25 committees have started collecting the O&M funds which will be paid to the Water BOD before the close of the year 2012.

% of Water User Committees with clear mechanism for collection and utilization of the O&M funds
Out of the 25 tap committees, none of them had clear mechanisms of collecting WUF. O&M funds were being given to the scheme attendant and any other person on the former BOD. It was only through the multi-stakeholder platform and the community meetings that have specified roles of different stakeholders in the scheme. The new C/man BOD Mr. Siriyako has through SNV and KALI’s mentorship introduced a receipt system. Each person paying user fee will be issued a receipt at all levels. (From the water user, tap stand committees and BOD)
10 out of 15villages from the 2 parishes have been reached with YY information. This being new anew approach, action plans have been made to start implementation. It is through follow up that KALI shall ascertain how far this has been adopted

How many households have access to safe water?
According to the hand over report presented by Mr. Patrick Syayipuma the Kasese district assistant water engineer, Karalike GFS originally served population of 4,608 people in 576 households, 5 primary schools with a total population of 2770 pupils.

Additionally, during FY 2010/11 an extension was made from Nyamughona to Mithumusanju was done with a provision of 4 taps serving a population of 700 people. However, the households here are to be established soon. Therefore when some of the 52 tap stands are finally corrected, the scheme will serve a total number of 5308 people.
Specifically, for Lyakirema and Kisaka parishes, the total number of water users will be established through tap stand committees by the end of Dec.2012.

How far are the water sources from the village, how are gender issues being addressed? What is our role?
7.    Out of the 7 villages in Kisaka parish, 3 are not connected to GFS. While in Lyakirema, 2 out of the 8 villages do not have access to the flow
8.    Some villages like Nyamighere is big and has only 3 taps. There are 2 fully fledged more villages without access to water. This coupled with irregular flow of existing taps in the 2 parishes; women’s traveling long distances for water is still registered in Nyakiyumbu and Bwera hence calling for SNV and KALI’s advocacy on scheme extension.
The issue of gender has been given an affirmative action. This is enhanced through emphasizing 4 women representative out of 6 be elected members on each of the 25 tap stand committees.

% of Water User Committees with implementing mechanisms for collection and utilization of the O&M funds.
As result of SNV and KALI’s intervention, several meetings have been conducted focusing on strengthening the O&M of Karalike GFS as well as improving sanitation & Hygiene in the same area since February 2012, sub county leaderships of Bwera and Nyakiyumbu have been supportive. Below are mechanisms put in place by the stakeholders.

ü  Each house hold to pay WUF of 1000= every month
ü  Out of the 1000= WUF per month, 700 will be remitted to the water BOD and 300 shs will be remaining at the tap stand committee for managing.
ü  Bye-laws at tap stand community level. eg; Home visit by tap stand committee members to the defaulting water user.
ü  Issuing of receipts for WUF from individual h/h, tap stand to central BOD.
ü  Central Water BOD bye-laws. Example; if a water user defaults 2months without paying WUF, is reported to the area C/man LC I.
ü  Cooperation of Kasese district local council system with the GFS BOD from LCI, LC III and LCV. To support water related bye-laws.
During MSP on the scheme O&M held on 21 Nov.2012, tap stand C/persons aggregated their user fee collection since Feb. 2012 as; 310500=however, this figure was not collected in an organized system. Especially with the old water BOD before June 2012.

The newly elected BOD has initiated new payments model of issuing receipts for WUF from tap stand level to central water BOD so that the scheme management is enabled to function effectively
Currently, there is no any WUF fund in liquid form. During community meetings, most of them were pledging to pay by this month (December 2012)


Outcome 7:
% of targeted HH adopting appropriate technologies (e.g. ECOSAN)

% of HH with access to hand-washing facilities and tippy taps.
Following MSP facilitated by SNV/KALI in conjunction with Ass. district water engineer, action plan to train VHTs was drown and this was conceptualized on 12 dec. when MSP on sanitation & hygiene was conducted and facilitated by SNV. Objectives of the meeting were;
1.    To share the basics on CLTS with the VHTs and extension staff and agree on the roll-out plan.
2.    To discuss the safe water chain and hand washing options and agree on strategies for promotion in the communities.
Kasese district local gov’t was represented by the district health educator. In his remarks, latrine coverage at district level is at around 72%. He added that the district has been promoting water purifying methods like use of; water guard, aqua safe etc. to help reduce chances of cholera, dysentery and un usual diarrhea. He called for combined approach to sensitizing community members on sanitation and hygiene since several methods has been employed but cholera still breaks up in the district. However, he declared the district free of Cholera.

This meeting was also attended by the C/man LCIII Bwera S/C. he thanked SNV and KALI for the efforts in promotingsanitation& hygiene. The tough speaking c/man in his remarks asked participants to get more serious with their hygiene. He posed a question! How can someone come from outside the district to come and tell you to clean your home? He said health issues are no longer going to be taken like people in ‘’OMWALIKO’’ literally meaning people in the after burial meeting where they talk issues and end with little emphasis on action.

The C/man instructed assistant to give ziro tolerance to any individual without a latrine. It will be a jail case, “after all my police is new at station without work I will utilize it this time” he revealed that on 17thdec. 2012 their will be council meeting and that the health assistant should come with S&H household monitoring program for council approval.



Action points drawn during the S&H meeting.
ü  Mobilize H/H without latrines to construct by end of January 2013
ü  Follow up TPC and council of Nyakiyumbu for resolutions on latrines in the cotton belt
ü  Health assistant Bwera Sub County to develop monitoring plan for sanitation &Hygiene at h/h and will be accompanied with sub county secretary for social services.
ü  Collect data on hand washing facilities by end of Jan.2013
ü  KALI to support VHTs in triggering off CLTS by end of feb.2013.
Recommendations:

1.    KALI has set the ground on CWASH project activities in the parishes of Kisaka and Lyakirema. There is need to affirmatively step up sensitization using theatre foras like; music dance and drama to promote Karalike GFS ownership and sanitation and hygiene by the community in the two sub counties-Bwera and Nyakiyumbu.
2.    More is still needed to sensitize for YY strategy. During the community meetings, some groups urged that 5 people had committed suicide due to challenges associated with savings.
3.    There is need to train water user committees to help them acknowledge the purpose for effective collection of WUF funds in ensuring perfect O&M of the scheme.
4.    The action points drown during the S&H meeting above should be given immediate follow-up in January 2013.

By: Scovia Masika and Geofrey Bwambale
KALI