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March 16, 2012
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You funded a drilling rig… and now, it’s going to work!

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sept

In September 2011, we asked you to help fund charity: water’s first drilling rig to bring clean water to 40,000 new people every year in rural Ethiopia. More than 1,400 mycharity: water fundraisers and donors answered in a big way, raising more than $1.2 million for a brand new drilling rig fleet.

By now, you probably know we’re big on showing impact. From proving every completed water project with photos and GPS to sharing stories from people you’ve helped get clean water to drink — we want you to see how you’ve changed lives.

And today… we have exciting news! We were expecting to drill the first well with the new rig in May of this year. But Founder Scott Harrison was just in Ethiopia and… the first drilling rig arrived early!

Take a look at how your support is already helping bring life’s most basic need to people in Ethiopia:

We’re so grateful for your support of our work, our partners’ work, and our mission to end the water crisis. Thank you, September Campaign supporters! And stay tuned: as promised, we’re getting the GPS device set up in this rig soon so you can track its progress from village to village.

Learn more about September Campaign 2011 here >

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March 8, 2012
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Recognizing women in the water crisis.

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Today is International Women’s Day. We’re taking a minute to celebrate some of the women of this past year — specifically, some amazing daughters, mothers and grandmothers we met in November 2011 while traveling in the Amhara region of Ethiopia.

Almost a billion people in the world live without clean water. We call that the water crisis. And while we know many of these are men, the water crisis takes a significant toll on women of the world. Women are twice as likely as men to collect water for their families each day. Many in Sub-Saharan Africa walk up to four hours each day to get water that’s likely to make them sick when they get it home to drink.

Today, we hope you join us in recognizing the women of this world who bear this burden, who get up early or stay out dangerously late, who haul forty pounds of water weight in a Jerry can strapped to their backs… who strive for and hope for their children’s health, who put their families first. We’re lucky enough to have met some when we travel to the field. Their stories continue to shock us, inspire us and keep us working to bring clean water to every person on the planet.

photos: Mo Scarpelli / charity: water
womens day

Women we met in Baskura, Ethiopia, in November:

This video was made for the Rockstar Cavemen, the sponsors of this new freshwater well.

Stories of amazing women and girls in the past year:

jerry can
- Khadija from Bangladesh: Clean water and toilets brought her back to school.
- Mintamir from rural Ethiopia: She used to wish for clean water to wash each day like the city girls… her wish came true. “I am just like them now.”
- Poppy from Bangladesh: Not much is clean or accessible for the disabled in Pora Bosti slum… but Poppy’s new toilets are.
- Whitney from the U.S.: She ran coast-to-coast to raise funds and awareness for clean water.

Have more stories to share about amazing women? Leave us a comment with a link or a personal story. Happy Women’s Day!

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March 1, 2012
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From the field: Getting creative in Malawi.

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I can’t get it to print.

It’s Monday morning at charity: water, and Stacie, one of our Development Interns, is standing next to my desk, laptop in hand, looking concerned. As the IT Manager, I run the helpdesk, which means fixing things for the staff when they fail — programs that won’t print, computers that seize up, emails that don’t go through. I’ve been managing our systems for two years now, and I’m proud that things run smoothly… most of the time.

michael

In a few moments, I figure out the problem, and Stacie smiles and goes back to her desk. I’ve learned that you can’t prevent every problem from happening. All disk drives eventually fail, IT managers say. But there are always solutions. One of the tricks is to be creative.

Don’t focus on why something won’t work; focus instead on how to make it work again, even if it’s not the way it worked before.

So far, this has in our office in New York City. Last month, I got to see how it could also apply to the challenges surrounding our work in East Africa. Specifically — how it applies to remote monitoring of our water projects here.

Nat Paynter, charity: water’s Water Programs Director, and I arrive in Malawi during rainy season, and everything is green and lush. I tell Nat it reminds me of my childhood in Florida; he seems disappointed. Nat has spent many years in Africa working on water and sanitation issues. It’s my first time here and I think he wants me to find it more exotic, foreign. But on the second day we get caught in a thunderstorm and again I think of Miami — it comes on quick and fierce, the trees blow sideways and the water washes off the rooftops in sheets, for a brief time it even hails — then suddenly it’s over and the sun is out, steam rising from the wet earth and trees.

shire valley

Despite this evidence of water abundance, Malawi is caught in the water crisis. The government estimates only 40% of the population has access to clean and safe water, and the actual figure is probably lower.

Malawi is one of the poorest countries in Africa. The government, though stable, has continuing problems with corruption and chronic revenue shortages. The local currency is of little value outside the country. As in many developing nations, public services such as water and sanitation are woefully underfunded. While there was a government presence in the districts we visited, they had little staff and few funds to carry out their work.

This is where Water for People-Malawi, one of our partnering organizations here, comes in. They have been working for more than a decade to bring improved water and sanitation to the people of Malawi.

Our first day in the field, we drive out of the city to the rural district of Chikhwawa, where about half a million people live. Heading south, we descend from the hills of Blantyre onto the expanse of the Shire valley, a broad plain bisected by the Shire river. Even though it’s the rainy season, we cross many dry culverts and washes. Later, I will read that the annual rainfall in Malawi has been gradually decreasing for more than a decade, a consequence of shifting weather patterns due to global warming.

At the first village we visit, we’re greeted by song and dance: women in brightly colored dresses, some with infants wrapped to their backs, clapping and stamping the earth with bare feet.

women

One of my first impressions is how clean and tidy the village seems. There is no clutter, no stuff lying about. Then it hits me: these people are poor. They don’t have much to leave sitting around.

Nat interviews the water committee:

“How were you selected?”
–The whole village had a meeting. We all decided.

“I see you are all women…”
–Yes, because it is the women who collect water.

Water for People doesn’t just build wells. They educate communities in sanitation and hygiene issues; they help to organize water committees; they develop new strategies for well maintenance and repair at the village level, and they try to keep it all affordable.

Ownership is key in their efforts. Only when a community feels invested in a water point and responsible for it is sustainability possible. Water for People is good at “thinking the entire process through,” Nat tells me.

well guide

I’m here to see if these efforts can be enhanced through remote monitoring, which means keeping an eye on the water points from afar. Back in Blantyre, I talk with Water for People’s Programs Director, Muthi Nhlema. He is using a technology called FLOW (Field Level Operations Watch) as a reporting and monitoring tool. Here’s how it works: Water For People gives specially-programmed cell phones to staff or volunteers, who collect data — GPS coordinates, populations served, how much water is flowing — at each water point.

Once these phones have internet access, they automatically upload all the data to be posted on Water for People website so anyone — government, partners and the public — can see them. Water For People monitors, evaluates and makes adjustments to their program with this info. It’s a brilliant idea, but the process is hampered by the need to send people into the field. Some wells are not visited again until a year and a half after they are constructed.

Now imagine if the cell phone could live at the well. Constantly, automatically sending back data: The well is working. The well is working. The well has stopped working. The well needs to be repaired.

This would be an invaluable tool to help all parties make sure the water keeps flowing. Here’s a breakdown of the difference between what Water For People uses now and what they hope to use in the future with charity: water’s support:

FLOW graphic

Water for People’s program and their commitment to sustainability are strong. This is a promising opportunity to support a pilot program on remote monitoring.

kids

On my last evening before returning home, I sit on the balcony at the hotel, watching bats flit against the sky as night approaches. Innovating a remote monitoring tool and deploying it will be a huge challenge — I think of a dozen reasons why it won’t work.

But charity: water is committed to keeping the water flowing. We owe it to the communities I saw here, to the local partners like Water for People who work hard to bring water to those communities, and to our donors, who make everything we do possible.

And I remember Stacie at the office, and the laptop that won’t print.

There are always solutions. Be creative.

– Michael Somoya
charity: water Office and IT Systems Manager

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December 2, 2011
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update: September Campaign 2011… we did it!

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Three months ago, we kicked off a campaign unlike any we’d ever done before. Through September Campaign 2011, we hoped to fund our first ever drilling rig so our partners could provide more water projects each year to communities in need. And in late November, with the help of more than 1,400 mycharity: water fundraisers…

rig

Since the standard fundraising time period for a mycharity: water campaign is three months, there are still hundreds of fundraisers with open campaigns. Their efforts will continue to support our September Campaign until the day their campaigns close; 100% of what they’ll raise will go towards a second drilling rig.

rig

The match.

From the start, one of our oldest supporters, Virginia Clay, pledged to match our September Campaign funds with an additional $1.2 million. Since we’ve reached our goal, our impact will be doubled!

Our mycharity: water fundraisers have been communicating to their donors that their hard-earned funds are going straight to the drilling rig — and we’re keeping that true by directing the additional funds they raise beyond our $1.2 million goal to purchase the second drilling rig. In turn, Virginia Clay’s match will cover the rest of that second rig, and then their remaining money will provide clean water projects for communities in Ethiopia.

The people who made (and keep making!) it happen.

We’ve been inspired by our September campaigners this year. From giving up their birthdays to coming up with new campaign ideas, our mycharity: water community was the driving force behind raising $1.2 million in three months. Here are a few fun campaigns we’re excited to share:

don't need bday
I Don’t Need a Birthday, People Need Water: David gave up his 25th birthday hoping to raise $1,000… and he blew through his goal by the end of his campaign.

goh soo
Because Our Bathtubs Drink Better Than 1/6 of the World: Goh Soo Lin lives in Singapore and studies environmental science; that’s where she learned that nearly a billion people live without clean water. To help, she gave up her 21st birthday and is $1,871 strong toward the goal of $5,000.

rickshaw
Rickshaw Run: These guys spent 14 days driving a rickshaw over the Himalayas, across India and through a desert — all to fundraise for the drilling rig. Check out the ride on their Facebook page here >

*We’re constantly keeping up with and getting inspired by our mycharity: water fundraisers. Check back with the blog each week when we feature a new fundraiser in our Campaign to Watch series.

So what happens now?

We’ve purchased the FS 250 drilling rig and last week, it shipped to Ethiopia. The second rig is in production. Fraste has sent us a few updates and our staff has been giddily passing around photos of the progress — we’re pretty excited. Take a look at charity: water’s brand new FS 250!

rig

We’ll mount a GPS device on the rig so you can watch it move from village to village, bringing clean drinking water to people in northern Ethiopia. The rig will be able to dig, on average, about 80 new wells per year. That means our partners can provide about 40,000 more people each and every year with access to life’s most basic need.

If you’re a September Campaign fundraiser or if you’ve signed up for our September Campaign updates, you’ll get an email from us early next year once we have the map up and tracking the
FS 250′s progress. Stay tuned!

Thanks to your support, your passion and your belief in our plan to scale our impact, September Campaign 2011 has been incredibly successful. We’re so grateful to have your help.

Learn more about September Campaign 2011 here >

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November 17, 2011
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From the field: country life in Amhara, Ethiopia.

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Amhara, Ethiopia.

minchit

I arrive in Ethiopia’s Amhara region after rainy season has just swept through. The fields are lush smears of gold and emerald. Every piece of land seems to be covered in a crop. In vast acres of teff, maize, sorghum and corn, specks of white scarves appear and submerge again — the farmers bent over their crops, harvesting their livelihood.

minchit

From what I picked up in conversations from the fields to the villages, farmers in Amhara make a pretty decent wage.

But country life isn’t easy.

Those who aren’t in the fields — usually kids and moms — spend most of their day preparing food, collecting firewood, herding animals and taking care of other chores necessary to keep their families healthy.

Mintamir, 18 years old, is one of them. Like a lot of the farm kids from my hometown in rural Michigan, she’s been handling chores since she was old enough to walk. When these chores were taken care of, only then would she get to school.

But unlike most farm kids in the U.S., of all her responsibilities, the most time-consuming and physically difficult was collecting water. She’d spend much of her morning walking to an open pond, then hauling her Jerry can home to her house. Her family would make the most of just a pair of these five-gallon containers of water each day. That meant only enough water to bathe (at most) once a week and wash clothes every two weeks.

“We didn’t even wash our faces or care for our personal hygiene,” she tells me. “We were ashamed of our body odor. But also, we’d get sick and then we didn’t focus on school. We’d be tired and sleepy.”

minchit

Mintamir has met kids from another life; the city. Her school was a mix of country and town folks. As she learned about their lives — more available water, no cattle to watch over, no crops to tend — she grew anxious. These other kids had time. School was their main focus. What if she fell behind? What if her chores, her illnesses, her waning self-confidence, set her back?

“We are country girls,” she says. “Because we were born here, we’d have to care for animals and the farm and also have to fetch water. We’d be late to school.”

Mintamir pushed through. She’d get up early, she’d stay late, she’d do whatever she had to in order to finish her education. But she’s the exception, not the rule. Our partners tell us that many kids in this area miss school to collect water; the dropout rate for girls is especially high.

Such is the way of country living, many believe. Girls like Mintamir accept that this comes with growing up in a farming family. But they also know that one of their most demanding chores could be relieved completely if they had a clean water source nearby.

“The society is changing here. Now, our time has become like… a computer! Efficient. It’s very different.”

So do we. In 2010, our local partners A Glimmer of Hope and ORDA (Organization for Rehabilitation and Development in Amhara) built a charity: water well right in the middle of Mintamir’s village.

She explains that families can now accomplish more each day. Kids can finish collecting water before school and buckle down on their studies instead of juggling multiple trips for more water later in the day. They can come to class clean and ready.

“The society is changing here. Now, we’re using our time efficiently,” she laughs. “Our time now has become like… a computer! Efficient. It’s very different, very different.”

minchit

And with clean water so close, she says families have doubled the amount of water they can use each day. People bathe regularly and wash their clothes every week.

Like the city people, she says.

“Now we are the same! We drink well water, too, and feel clean,” she says, speaking for the younger kids around her who are still in school. “When the bell rings, we attend class at the same time.”

She laughed.

“I am just like them now.”

Mintamir has plans to move from her small village of Minchit soon. She’s going to Bahir Dar, Amhara’s second-largest city, to pursue more education. She’s a farm girl at heart, but she’s eager to keep learning. Now that Minchit has water, she hopes more girls in her village will have that chance, too.

– Mo Scarpelli
charity: water multimedia producer

To date, we’ve funded 330 projects in the Amhara region of Ethiopia. Learn more about our local partner, A Glimmer of Hope, here >

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