Idea for the latrine project
We are a group of participants and staff of Global Potential, a program of the non-profit organization Globalhood, which promotes youth leadership (www.global-potential.org). In Global Potential’s program, youth travel and live with families for six weeks in rural villages while learning about and working with the community to implement service projects. We were lucky enough to live in Batey Cuchilla.
In the summer of 2010 we conducted a community census in addition to other community projects and workshops. We counted 104 households and 476 people. We also found some startling statistics. The most salient statistic was that only 22 households (21%) had a latrine or had access to one. That means that 82 households (79%) have to do their business in places not designed for human waste, such as fields or streams.
Global Potential returned to Cuchilla in the summer of 2011 with a new group of students to find some positive changes in the community. Local teen Francia Simone won the International Children's Peace Prize for helping undocumented children receive birth certificates. Her prize money will help build houses. An American church group engineered clean drinking water at two retrieval points in the community. World Vision was repairing the school. The latrine situation, however, remained the same.
In a community meeting, Cuchilla residents voiced that their greatest needs were improved housing and latrines. Again in individual conversations with key leaders, the need for more and better latrines was repeated. When asked what barriers prevented the construction of latrines, community members cited "money" as the greatest obstacle. We consider the lack of latrines in Cuchilla to be an issue of urgency not only for community sanitation, but also for human dignity. It is not unusual for children to get sick with bacteria infections, and even more worrisome is that cholera has slowly been making its way to the bateys in 2011. Improper disposal of human waste only exacerbates health problems.
Project outline
In dialogue with the community, the goal is to raise money for five to ten community latrines, to be placed throughout the batey. They will be compostable latrines and we will work with a local NGO to build them. The cost per compostable latrine is about 500 U.S. dollars. Our goal is to raise the money between September and December 2011.
Our time in Cuchilla had profound impacts on us (for more info see www.global-potential.org) and now we want to do something for the people who so generously shared with us their time, energy, and love.
How to help
All donations will go through the non-profit organization Globalhood.
To donate with a credit card, go online to:
http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/friendsofcuchilla/fundraisingpage.
To send a check:
Make the check payable to Globalhood, Inc. and in the memo write “Cuchilla Latrine Project” Send it to:
Globalhood, Inc.
c/o Demos
220 Fifth Ave., 8th Floor
New York, NY, 10001
Please help us reach our goal! Thank you!