Sunday, January 4, 2015

World Class Newsletter: Fall 2014


                               


New Latrine for Sapeiman


World Class board member Susan Kraeger (left) addresses assembled local dignitaries

In September, Board members Susan Kraeger and Judy Willsey visited Ghana where they inspected our existing projects,  commissioned the newest one, and planned for
 the next one.  They found our facilities in good order and were impressed by the new latrine in Sapeiman.  Like the previous one in Amasaman, it  is a flush system comprised
of 12 units.  With its completion, World Class made good on its promise to former loan clients that a well or latrine would be provided for each community in which they lived.  The Sapeiman latrine was commissioned in a colorful ceremony complete with traditional drumming, libations, blessings, TV and print news coverage, and many, many speeches.


World Class Director, Rita Dzoagbe. presents keys to the chief

Standard facilities for the able
 Accommodation for the elderly and infirm



       Ewe chief, Nii Togbe, holds forth 
Pouring libations


Small boys enthralled by the drums
  

New Project  for Chintu

Some time ago Chief Nana Kofi Mankata II saw the World Class sign outside our new office in Fise and came in to inquire what  we did.  Learning that we built community latrines, he promptly requested one for his community, Chintu.  The World Class team paid a visit there in September.  Located several miles north of Amasaman,  it is an appealing place up in the hills, surrounded by greenery, and accessible by a surprisingly good paved road.  The morning of our visit, a grey mist obscured the hillsides.  Chintu suffers from extreme poverty.  It has no  sanitation.  Accompanied by the chief, we wended our way to the site of the proposed latrine-- an open field with a worn path running down the middle of it.  To our discomfiture and amusement, we found that the new site is also the old site (hence the path).  Chintu's school, too, lacks most every-thing, including sanitation. Its headmaster, Mr. Victor Owusu, has made an enterprising attempt at an open air urinal with privacy walls made of woven fronds.  No one uses the open pit for defecation due to the complete lack of privacy. Clearly, Chintu could use our help.
Proposed site of Chintu's new latrine

 Open air urinal at the Chintu school

                     
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New Technology

World Class is proud of the three latrines it has built,  but recognizes the problems associated with them.  Flies and odor are associated with the waterless composting type and conventional flush facilities use a lot of water.  Cost is significant for both. The project in Chintu will rely on a different system which, hopefully, will better address these concerns.
The Rural Poor Microflush Toilet (RPFT) is the invention of Steve Mecca, a retired science professor associated with Providence College in Rhode Island. He designed a unique valve for flushing (a kind of flap) which separates the toilet from the rest of the system, eliminating odor and flies.  It's operated by a lever near the base of the toilet. 

The RPFT is a flush system which uses a cupful of water per use and is sourced from the gray water from hand-washing.  This compares to the bucketful required at facilities like those recently built in Amasaman and Sapeiman.  The septic pit is individual to each unit and much less deep than that of more conventional systems. A process in which worms and microorganisms convert waste to odorless compost creates a product ready for agricultural use.  This technology is adaptable to community or individual household use and is based on materials produced in Ghana.

Through the networking and familial connections which so often play a major role in
work in the developing world, Board member Susan Kraeger knows both Mr. Mecca and the young contractor, Sammie Gyaba, whose company, SamAlex Sanitation Solutions, is promoting the use of the RPFT.  Sammie recently won Ghana's prestigious Game Changer Award (a national competition for ideas/endeavors which will advance Ghanaian society) for his advocacy of the system.  World Class has a dual ambition in its Chintu project-- to provide sanitation for the community and to help kick-start this young entrepreneurial effort.  There are no sure things in Ghana, but World Class is  cautiously optimistic about the prospects for this new technology.

  They Need You!    Nothing Happens Without You!

Children at the Chintu school
   
Support a New Latrine for Chintu!

Send your check to World Class  PO Box 325  La Grangeville, NY  12540
or
On-Line via our donate button and PayPal
:www.worldclass-ghana.org


Thank You!

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