Rotary.org: News - Global grant provides drinking water for remote village in Thailand

 Global grant provides drinking water for remote village in Thailand

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Rotary District 5170 (California, USA) is providing safe drinking water to 800 people in Lamchoke, Thailand, a remote village about 250 miles north of Bangkok, through a Rotary Foundation global grant.

The US$72,000 project was completed in August through District Designated Fund allocations, contributions from participating Rotary clubs, and a match from The Rotary Foundation. It involved three separate vocational training teams (VTTs): two led by California Rotarians to help launch and complete the project and one from the host club of Sawankhaloke North, which visited California to learn how to run a small water system.

According to Roy Russell, District 5170’s vocational training team chair and a member of the Rotary Club of San Jose, the project shows how VTTs foster cultural exchange while allowing Rotarians to use their vocational skills to benefit people in another country.

“I’ve been involved in Group Study Exchange (travel grants for teams from two countries to exchange visits) for the last eight years and have had a lot of experience in Southeast Asia. But I am very, very happy to see a project that has demonstrable results,” Russell says. “There’s nothing equal to turning on a valve and getting water where you didn’t have it before. And there’s still an exchange as the teams visit their counterparts.”

“I am very excited about VTTs,” says Roger Hassler, past governor of District 5170, “because they link the experience and knowledge of Rotarians and non-Rotarians together to do significant programs throughout the world.”

Asking questions

Hassler wanted to do a water project in Asia and recruited Russell, whose wife is Vietnamese, because of Russell’s connections and experience as a water professional. The idea was to drill a well. But when the exploratory team arrived in Thailand looking for an ideal site, they learned a valuable lesson in sustainable projects: always ask the local community what it needs.

As it turns out the village had a long history of digging wells that ran dry.

“We were getting all negative vibes from the village because they had had experience that drilling wells wasn’t good. And frankly, at that point I was pretty demoralized,” Russell recalls. “But then we were just chatting with the villagers, when suddenly we discovered that there was a treated water pipeline two or three miles away. The whole project changed. We would never have understood that if somebody hadn’t asked a question.”

The first VTT helped install pipeline from the existing water main to a water tank built on a hill above the village. The water then flows downhill to the village, where it branches off to individual homes. A water meter at each house monitors usage, with families paying a small monthly fee to maintain the system.

A four-person team from Thailand led by a Rotarian from the host club traveled to California in June to train in pipeline construction and sanitization and small water system management. They also accompanied an inspector for several days, learning how similar water systems in the United States work.

Another team from California visited Lamchoke in early August to finish the project, but two breaks in the existing main prevented them from completing their work. The breaks were repaired, and the Thai team finished the project a few weeks later.

“For the first time, they will have a safe and reliable water supply,” Russell says. “In the past, in the dry season, they’ve even had to truck in water. Now they can turn on a tap, use the water for drinking and cooking purposes, and live a much more comfortable and healthy life.”


14 Comments:
At 9:48AM on 18 January 2013, alemu Nega wrote: dear Sirs, May i kindly ask you please to help us educate the disadvantaged girls, and men, help villagers get access to clean water in Ethiopia Alemu Nega
At 1:09PM on 11 December 2012, G.Kumaresan PDRFC wrote: Worthy project
At 9:34AM on 10 December 2012, PDG Jacobus Weber/D-1610 wrote: Well done. Personally I have very much involved in many waterprojects in Indonesia. Congratulations with an excellent result
At 9:55AM on 7 December 2012, Tony Colman wrote: I am pleased that the main emphasis is on training in country (in Thailand) of local people to do the work to connect to the existing water main. I assume this took place with trained VTT personnel and with the support of the Thailand Government Ministry of Water who had agreed to take over responsibility for the long term maintenance. If not It would be shame. Rotary should always workk with and through the National Governments in partnership.
At 9:49AM on 7 December 2012, Ganesh Bhat,DG 2014-15.RI Dist 3170,India wrote: I am planning a Rain Water Harwest project in my Entire District which covers many rural areas. Construction of Coffer Dams in Hilly areas to retain water to percolate and raise the water level and supplying to nearby villages for drinking purpose.I am looking for Partners.
At 8:45AM on 7 December 2012, Rtn Gangadhar Khandelwal wrote: Excellent work done.
At 3:28PM on 26 November 2012, Dr P K Verma wrote: Congratulation for such projects.It is best service to the human kind. We have already planned to provide drinking water facility at our adopted village.Once the project is completed I will request all my Rtn friends for advice and further enhancement of the project,like providing community toilet and community Bath rooms Dr P K Verma, President Rotary club of Rourkela Mid Town
At 4:36PM on 21 November 2012, rtn akshay mehta id 222396 wrote: it is wonderful i want more description of this project i am not clear that club has got both grant one is for vtt and second is for project cost i want all detail
At 4:33PM on 21 November 2012, Jay Deshpande wrote: I am from Rotary Club of Poona, Dist 3131, India. I am looking for a partner for providing water and sanitation facilities to school children in rural area near Pune. We have implemented this project in 4 schools this year and as the President 2013-14 ,I want to continue with this noble project. pres albert untalan rc rizal centro and PP Hope can contact me to have further details at deshpande.jay@gmail.com please.
At 9:30AM on 20 November 2012, pres albert untalan rc rizal centro wrote: it is really a nice project i am thinking of almost the same project in the remote village of antipolo City, philippines, may be we will be getting some vital information in the village needed for the project.
At 9:22AM on 20 November 2012, Richard Dangler wrote: I sure would like to learn more from San Jose, but I cannot get past the very difficult CODE requirement -- nor know why it is needed for this informaiton. Richard Daangler, Edwards RC of Colorado
At 12:00PM on 5 November 2012, PP Hope wrote: Nice to read that Rotary International in Thailand was involve and we would also be interested in getting involve with somebody outside the country for a global community project.
At 11:11AM on 29 October 2012, Dr. Charles Simons (PDG Chuck) wrote: I'd like to design and implement another component to "Clean Water." Let's add: "Clean water--Clean Teeth." After all teeth are the beginning to the processes of good nutrition, disease prevention, communication and literacy, and with such we can pursue peace, and economic/community develop. Without such, all efforts achieve less of height than they might have. A simple oral hygiene packet and instruction guide can implement the message. This can become a universal, world wide project for each well drilled. Let me help you.
At 10:43AM on 22 October 2012, Nitin Dafria wrote: Good work done.

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