Friday, July 11, 2014

The Final Report for Unclogging the Blockages is here!  See the link below to download the report via Google Drive.  Interested in learning more?  Were you an organizer and you'd like to discuss the findings?  Stay tuned for a future skype meeting to get everyone together to discuss the report and the next steps to #unclogit.

Unclogging the Blockages 2014: Final Report 

If you have any issues accessing the report, please reach out to jsauer@waterforpeople.org and he can send you a version via email.

Additionally, a huge thanks to our partner SuSanA who have created a page with not only the final report, but who have compiled many presentations, speeches, photos and articles from the workshop.  Check out the page here: SuSanA Unclogging the Blockages to see more.

Many thanks to everyone who contributed!


Monday, May 19, 2014

Nature Calls: Kampala's Overflowing Toilets

Sam Loewenberg, a reporter whose travel to Uganda was funded by the Pulitzer Prize Center on Crisis Reporting, describes the current situation for fecal sludge management in Kampala in his article published by Aljazeera America.  An excerpt is below -- read the full story here:
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/3/21/nature-calls-kampalasoverflowingtoilets.html

KAMPALA, Uganda — For many Americans, the idea of waiting even one day to get their toilet fixed is unbearable. Last month Florence Asiimwe, a mother of three who lives in the Bwaise Kazo zone of Kampala, had to wait six weeks for hers to be serviced. In the meantime, her family used a neighbor’s facilities. On the day the latrine was finally being fixed, she said simply, “I am very happy,” and went back to washing her laundry on the stoop of her small brick home.

 Asiimwe’s long wait will be familiar to the residents of Bwaise Kazo, one of the biggest and oldest slums in Uganda’s capital. According to the Kampala Capital City Authority, more than 70 percent of the city’s 1.3 million people rely on pit latrines, or outhouses. But pit latrines fill up. It might take six months or a few years, depending on where they were built, how well they drain and how many people use them, but they will fill up. And in 2015, an estimated 10 percent will be full.

The problem is that in the overbuilt patchwork of brick and scrap-metal houses that make up the slums, there is no easy way to empty the latrines. People make do but not very well. There is water, but the supply is inconsistent, and the slum dwellers pay 10 times as much for their water than do people with piped water in their homes. There are roads, but they are not paved. There are latrines, but they fill up. Sewage removal trucks cannot navigate the narrow dirt and mud streets, and most people could not afford them anyway.

Hence the Gulper, a two-meter-long PVC and stainless steel hand pump used to empty latrines. As Asiimwe does her laundry, her 2-year-old boy, David, is out back, watching as two men in blue uniforms pump out the latrine sludge into plastic canisters, which they then load onto a truck to take to Kampala’s only sewage treatment plant, in Bugolobi, about a mile from the city center. The smell as they remove the sludge is nauseating, but the process appears fairly clean, all things considered.

 The idea of turning sanitation into a small business in Kampala originated with Water for People, a Denver-based nonprofit that brought the Gulper to the city by contracting with a local manufacturer to make and sell it. The group fosters grass-roots water and sanitation projects in eight other African and Latin American countries. Water for People recruited and trained entrepreneurs who wanted to start Gulper businesses. Now the nonprofit is working with the entrepreneurs to try to set up an association and certification scheme. After just one year, the businesses in Kampala are self-sustaining or at least trying to be.

British engineer Steven Sugden, who now works for Water for People, invented the Gulper while doing research at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in 2003. Though the manually operated pump is a simple piece of equipment, it has succeeded where trucks and big infrastructure have failed, and in bringing accessibility and relative affordability to sludge removal, the new technology has made sanitation available to Kampala residents like Asiimwe. 

After years of working on a range of technocratic and bureaucratic schemes in community sanitation, Sugden says this free-market approach of Gulper entrepreneurs seems to work best. “I’ve come to sanitation as a business not because it is the perfect solution but because everything else I’ve tried has failed,” he says. “We try and have as light a touch as possible, as we know the risks of NGO involvement screwing up the market. We want to remain invisible so we can disappear completely when the market starts to mature.”

The Disease With No Borders

The Pulitzer Prize Center on Crisis Reporting sponsored journalist Sam Loewenberg to travel to Uganda to cover the Unclogging event.  Below is an excerpt from his article, which can be found here:
 http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(14)60817-5/fulltext
Uganda's struggle with schistosomiasis

Sam Loewenberg

Sanitation is not just a rural problem. In Kampala, only 5% of the city has sewage coverage—mostly wealthy residential and business districts. Much of the rest of the population has to rely on pit latrines. In the crowded housing and unpaved roads of the slums, trucks cannot get access, so the latrines fill up within a few years and are then not emptied. Not only do they then become unusable, they often overflow when it rains. So residents are forced to illegally empty their latrines into open gutters.In the Kiswa Health Center, a public clinic in Kampala that serves more than 3300 patients, the effect of NTDs is overwhelming. The clinic receives about 120 cases of diarrhoeal disease a month, when it should be about ten, says a nurse who asked that her name not be used. Worm infestation is at 100 per month, about 20 times too high, since they have a deworming programme, she says. They receive about two severe cases of malnutrition a day, she says. They also had three new cases of tuberculosis in one day, and have seen two cases of multidrug resistant tuberculosis. HIV is also making a resurgence.
The wealthy sectors of Ugandan society, including corporations, need to take part in funding sanitation initiatives because local governments do not have enough funding, says Godfrey Kisekka, one of Kampala's town clerks. “We need to sensitise the rich that the health of the poor matters to them. Disease has no borders.”



Friday, March 7, 2014

It's Easy to Flush and Forget.

Jailan Adly, Director of MBAs Without Borders, a panelist and attendant of the workshop, wrote an excellent piece (Part 1 of a three-part series) on her experience at Unclogging the Blockages. Click here to read more:  Part I: How an Ambitious Group of Innovators are Catalyzing Change in the Toilet Business

Monday, March 3, 2014

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Day 3: Unclogging the Blockages

It’s easy to talk shit.  Which is to say, it’s not difficult to identify challenges within sanitation programs; there are many.  What’s difficult is to find the root of those challenges and then develop a viable plan to address them and ultimately move the sector forward.

Day 3 of the Unclogging Blockages conference, the final day, forced participants to think practically and critically about the solutions they were proposing.  What is actionable?  What has been done before?  Where can we collaborate with others?  What is beyond our capacity?  Why is each step necessary?

Satya Chaubey of PSI India was lead facilitator for the team assigned the task of designing a solution to improve consumer and enterprise-level financing.  Unlike traditional donor funding for implementing an entire program, this level of finance is lent to individual households and businesses – most commonly known as microfinance loans.  Over the course of Day 3 and with regular feedback from other workshop participants, Satya's team outlined their action plan: create a Global Sanitation Financing Alliance at the international donor level that provides financing at the local level. They gave specific tasks to be completed, all the way down to, "write a concept note" and called upon workshop participants to commit themselves or their organizations to assist with the completion of that task.

By outlining a clear pathway forward, this week's teams have taken the typical conference to a new level. It's not enough to know the problems and suggest solutions; we need to take action to Unclog the Blockages.