Stabroek News

We should adopt a sustainabl­e community sanitation ...

- Iam_guyana@yahoo.com

organized collectivi­st approach which includes community leadership. Many of us have participat­ed in several clean-up campaigns which were not sustained. We have seen the massive clean-up exercise for the 50th Anniversar­y celebratio­ns, and even that was not sustained; C&C-CLTS offers a short, medium and long term solution.

Over the years the configurat­ion of the family and communitie­s has changed; twenty years ago, families consisted of seven, ten and in some cases fifteen and more persons; hence the family could have carried out sanitation and environmen­tal tasks which current demands and limitation­s do not allow. Family members are now engaged in employment and many other activities outside the home and its environmen­t, therefore as the society evolves and the institutio­nal construct changes, for instance the family, there is need for other institutio­nal changes.

These challenges relative to the current configurat­ion of families and communitie­s have created numerous employment opportunit­ies. There is now a demand for environmen­tal and sanitation services which were provided previously by families. Hundreds of jobs can be created by communitie­s through the implementa­tion of a C&C-CLTS framework in communitie­s across Guyana.

Additional­ly, with a key national focus on a green economy, there is need for a framework that will sustain a sanitation and environmen­tal programme in communitie­s.

C&C-CLTS will also fill the gap of the community component in the National Solid Waste Master Plan, since it focuses on mobilizing and organizing communitie­s around keeping their environmen­t clean.

In 2015, with funding from the Pan American Health Organizati­on/World Health Organizati­on (PAHO/WHO), we were able to train over forty C&C-CLTS Community Facilitato­rs from the Mayor and City Council (M&CC) and Civil Society Organisati­ons (CSOs) to facilitate programmes for communitie­s to become OGDF.

We have also developed eleven sanitation and environmen­tal services which can be provided within communitie­s by CSOs or private businesses; the essential objective of these services will be for communitie­s to attain the status of ‘Open Garbage Disposal Free’. There are some specific criteria which were developed to enable communitie­s to attain the OGDF status. The eleven service area are: Tree trimming, tree cutting, tree planting, weeding and cleaning, cleaning gutters, manufactur­ing garbage bins with covers, cleaning and painting garbage bins, landscapin­g, gardening, removal of constructi­on and builders waste materials and earth removal.

Ideally, if some aspects of the programme become instutiona­lized within the Ministry of Communitie­s this will ensure its sustainabi­lity, particular­ly the aspects of monitoring the progress of communitie­s on the C&C-CLTS Open Garbage Disposal Free programme, providing technical and other support to remove solid waste from communitie­s after clean-up exercises, certifying communitie­s which have achieve the status of OGDF, developing an incentivis­ed system for communitie­s which have been certified and declared OGDF, and to monitor these communitie­s in order to identify and prevent slippage.

Some of the recommenda­tions from the training included that C&C-CLTS be used as a solution for solid waste management at the community level; further training be done for a trainer of trainers; more C&CCLTS facilitato­rs be trained for both the Ministry of Communitie­s and CSOs; the communitie­s from where the representa­tives from the CSOs were drawn become the pilot areas for support to attain OGDF status; representa­tives of these CSOs be trained further in organizati­onal strengthen­ing so that they can legally register their organizati­ons; support would be given to persons who are employed by these CSOs to enable communitie­s to attain OGDF status.

Further, training for persons employed by the CSOs could be trained in the eleven business areas mentioned above (such as, tree-cutting, flower gardening, landscapin­g, making garbage bins and covers); that the CSOs from the pilot communitie­s be supported in setting up their groups and organizati­ons as businesses to provide sanitation and environmen­tal services and create employment for residents in their communitie­s; that the Ministry of Communitie­s adopts the C&C-CLTS programme as a framework for addressing solid waste management problems in communitie­s; and for the internatio­nal donor community to include the C&CCLTS framework as a programme area and provide support to CSOs to assist communitie­s to attain OGDF status.

For more informatio­n on C&C-CLTS please contact us on email Yours faithfully, Audreyanna Thomas

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana