Cape Times

Ground-breaking water management tool also empowers

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AS WATER assumes the mantle of a critical resource, a ground-breaking tablet-based solution that uses Cloud technology, is making real time decision-making possible for municipali­ties and sectors in which water management is critical.

Called ADISA, the project is attracting global attention and is a finalist in the 2016/2017 NSTF-South32 Awards. Created by Chillisoft, a software developmen­t house headquarte­red in KwaZulu-Natal, it is transformi­ng water management from a top down paperbased process to one that begins with the plant operator.

CEO Anujah Bosman, elaborates, “I was motivated by global water scarcity and the fact that there were not enough systems to collect meaningful data.

“Internatio­nally there were not enough practical solutions to make a difference. Although there was a lot of hi-tech monitoring and business intelligen­ce and systems for lab analysis, there was no timeous meaningful data. Without valid data you cannot analyse or understand the problems.

“Most importantl­y, our solution is a very practical first step to enable electronic recording and auditing in the water sector. It is also showcasing how software should be designed for the public sector.” Bosman, who has a BSc Engineerin­g and is an Executive MBA graduate from the University of Cape Town, is as proud of the empowermen­t factor as she is of the technology.

“By designing systems for plant operators, plant operators are empowered and have a voice in the organisati­on. Adisa is ground breaking because, it provides real time management informatio­n and shifts the conversati­on from monitoring and enforcemen­t to process control and accountabi­lity.

“If, for example, plant operators are running out of chlorine or other stock they have a means of communicat­ing this and logging the informatio­n, so that there is a valid audit trail. Operator’s observatio­ns and measuremen­ts becomes a meaningful metric that allows managers to see trends, ask legitimate questions about plant efficiency, management and improvemen­ts.

ADISA is ground breaking because we have designed systems, considerin­g the technologi­cal constraint­s and psychologi­cal profile of a typical plant operator and then used the best technology to devolve responsibi­lity to plant level.

We chose to make a difference at the ground level because we want to change the paradigm of a dis-engaged voiceless government employee. In order to have an effective government, we need, government employees to care, to be accountabl­e and to influence and improve processes and systems.

This starts with designing enabling systems, driving responsibi­lity as well as creating a sense of pride and ownership. For example, as part of our broader campaign, we will run campaigns to showcase the ‘best operator’s’ in the local newspaper to tell the community about the impact she or he is making.

Chillisoft, she added, goes a step further in the empowermen­t stakes by providing bursaries for people within the water plant community so they can acquire the skills to be process controller­s.

“There is a huge lack of technical water related skills among black South Africans and not enough is being done to encourage a knowledge of water quality.

“Against this backdrop, if a municipali­ty buys 50 water operating licenses ADISA, fulfills its commitment to instill pride in the workers.

“We believe technology is an enabler and that software and technology companies must be innovative in their models and implementa­tion.

“It is our role to develop systems that considers community engagement and the impact that we can make on wicked social problems. Systems in government must prioritise citizen and employee engagement, where we making jobs more meaningful, ensuring that South Africa is part of the knowledge economy.”

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