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Monte Verde, Nicaragua

December 7, 2011. Jim Perlow Sonya Milonova Mark Hasemeyer Mayra Ortiz Jon Girand. Monte Verde, Nicaragua. Background Preparing for Participatory Appraisal PAR team member matrix & contributions Interest group matrix Analysis of Appraisal SWOC Key concerns MCUA

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Monte Verde, Nicaragua

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  1. December 7, 2011 Jim Perlow Sonya Milonova Mark Hasemeyer Mayra Ortiz Jon Girand Monte Verde, Nicaragua

  2. Background • Preparing for Participatory Appraisal • PAR team member matrix & contributions • Interest group matrix • Analysis of Appraisal • SWOC • Key concerns • MCUA • Problem & solution trees • Stella modeling • Solution prioritization • Feasibility matrix • Logframe • Rights-based analysis • Harm-benefit analysis • Next Steps Outline

  3. Background

  4. Monte Verde,, Nicaragua

  5. Nation – Nicaragua District – Matagalpa Municipality – Terrabona Comarca (Group of Villages) – Payacuca Village – Monte Verde Geographic Structure

  6. Population: 5.6 million (July 2011) Life expectancy: 71.9 years Probability of dying before 5 years old: 26/1000 live births Population below poverty line: 48% Literacy: 67.2% Access to improved water source: 85% Nicaragua Demographics

  7. Population: 720 Households: 129 Literacy: 54% Households without electricity: 121 Households without access to improved water source: 80 Households without improved sanitation: 54 Monte Verde Demographics

  8. Organizations in the community • World Vision distributed ceramic filters to families with children in school • El Porvenirhas completed an appraisal and has active presence in the community • FISE built 70 latrines in 2005 • ENACAL promised to dig a well, but has not done so

  9. Community collects drinking water from • small unprotected springs • the creek • rain water • During the dry season • creek and springs dry out • women walk 2km to get water from the neighboring community (La Pita), or • water is trucked in by the local government Review of Existing Data

  10. Preparing for Participatory Appraisal

  11. Team Member Matrix

  12. Contributions

  13. Interest Group Matrix

  14. Analysis of Appraisal Results

  15. SWOC Analysis

  16. Vulnerability Analysis

  17. Lack of access to clean water Incomplete education Lack of access to improved sanitation Key Concerns

  18. Key Concerns-Weighted Analysis

  19. Provide consistent access to clean water for the community of Monte Verde to improve quality of life Identified Objective

  20. Reduced quality of life Increased money spent on medical care Less capital growth No development projects Less productivity Less skilled labor Hygiene-related diseases Lost time collecting water Lost work & school days Community is less empowered Need to walk far for water Poor hygiene Water related diseases Lack of access to clean water Water sources are polluted Lack of water No distribution system Lack of treatment Nicaragua Problem Tree Not enough sanitation systems No protection of surface water sources No ground-water collection No rainwater collection No money for infrastructure Poor education Lack of community organization Springs dry up in summer No govt regulation Lack of land ownership Lack of road infrastructure Lack of $ to pay teachers No community empowerment Lack of income Lack of job creation

  21. Four Main roots Lack of access to clean water Lack of water Water sources are polluted No distribution system Lack of treatment Nicaragua Problem Tree Not enough sanitation systems No protection of surface water sources No ground-water collection No rainwater collection No money for infrastructure Poor education Lack of community organization Springs dry up in summer No govt regulation Lack of land ownership Lack of road infrastructure Lack of $ to pay teachers No community empowerment Lack of income Lack of job creation

  22. Improved agriculture Community well being More income Improved education More skilled labor More productivity More development projects Ability to attend school & work Less spending on medical care Less travel time Community empowerment Improved health Improved hygiene Less distance to water Access to clean water Clean water sources Water availability Distribution system Treatment Protection of surface water sources Full sanitation coverage Rainwater collection Money for infrastructure Wells Poor education Govt enforcement Community organization Land ownership Road infrastructure Money to pay teachers Community empowerment Money Job creation

  23. Rainwater Catchment System • Treatment: Filtration and Chlorination • Drill Deep Wells • Treatment: None or Chlorination • Spring Water Storage and Distribution System • Treatment: None or Chlorination Solution Ideas from PAR Results

  24. Determines which solution would work best for Monte Verde. • ROC Method • Determine a list of factors that are of concern • Assign a value to every factor for each alternative • Rank the factors in order of importance • Calculate and analyze results Decision Analysis: Rank Order Centroid (ROC) Method

  25. ROC Matrix

  26. ROC Results According to the ROC results, deep wells provide the best overall solution.

  27. Shows the community relationships from a systems perspective. How would the installation of a new well impact Monte Verde? Stella Model

  28. Stella Model

  29. Stella Model Results Current situation. People lose access to water during the dry season. Simulation ran over a three month time period.

  30. Stella Model Results Well installed. People have access to clean water through the dry season. Simulation ran over a three month time period.

  31. Feasibility Matrix Jim Problem, Group, Action Feasibility Matrix

  32. Logical framework

  33. Logical Framework

  34. Closing thoughts

  35. The right to water is the right of everyone to sufficient, safe, acceptable, and physically accessible and affordable water for personal and domestic uses. (UN, November 2002) The UN reconfirmed Right to Water and for the first time Right to Sanitation. They are essential to the realization of all human rights. (UN, July 2010) Rights-Based Analysis

  36. Benefit - We are addressing one of the communities’ human needs. As part of the Key-Concerns Weighted Analysis, the community identified access to potable water as one of their top three concerns. • Benefit/Harm The construction of a well has the opportunity to supply the community with water for years. We want to come up with a sustainable well design; otherwise, we could harm the community by giving them false hope and delaying meeting this important need in their community. Benefit/Harm Analysis

  37. Inequality– The goal is to meet the community’s need for safe water, but we risk creating inequality if we do not provide potable water for the entire community. Inclusivity - A benefit of the project is to provide everyone a chance to contribute to the well-being of their community. Our appraisal attempts to include all representative groups. Benefit/Harm Analysis

  38. Capacity and risk analysis Detailed solution design Detailed implementation plan of activities Monitoring and evaluation Exit strategy Next Steps

  39. Gracias!Preguntas?

  40. General CARE Project Design Handbook, Richard Caldwell, Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere (CARE), Atlanta, USA, 2002. Recovering Sustainable Development, David G. Victor, Foreign Affairs, January/February 2006, Vol. 85, No. 1. Global Burden of Disease, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland, May 2011. Improving Water Governance in Kenya Through the Human Rights Based Approach, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Kenya and UNDP Governance Facility (WGF), November 2007https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.watergovernance.org%2Fdocuments%2FResources%2FReports%2FBASELINE_REPORT_HRBA_Kenya.pdf Appendix - Bibliography

  41. NGO Partners El Provenir – Clean Water for Nicaragua, http://elporvenir.org/page/how-we-work Nicaragua Monitoring Report 2010, Water for People, World Water Corps, http://www.waterforpeople.org/flow-mapping/monitoring-reports.html CRS Work in Nicaragua, Catholic Relief Services, http://crs.org/nicaragua/projects.cfm Final Design Report, Matagalpa Infrastructure Improvements, Engineers Without Borders, Portland State University Chapter, https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ewbpsu.org%2Ffiles%2FMatagalpaHogar_Report.doc Appendix - Bibliography

  42. Nicaragua – Land, Health and Water Land Tenure and Property Rights, USAID http://usaidlandtenure.net/usaidltprproducts/country-profiles/nicaragua/country-profile-nicaragua#Minerals_Nicaragua Human Development Index, Child Mortality, Improved Water Sources, Sanitation, Paved Roads and Income per Person, , Gapminder World, gapminderworld.org, Childhood Diarrhoea and Its Prevention in Nicaragua, Determinants of Domestic Water Use in Rural Nicaragua, Sandiford, P, Gorter AC., Orzco, J.G., and Pauw, J.P., Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1990; 93:383-389, Liverpool, UK. www.icas.net/new.../Determinants%20domestic%20water%20use.pdf Maps-Nicaragua, Terrabona & Monte Verde Administrative Map of Nicaragua – Nations Online Projject Terrabona, Nicaragua 1:50,000 Contour Map (20 meter CI) showing Monte Verde at Lat. 1246’43.6’N, Long. 8556”18.56”W (100 meter Grid Square Coordinate: 131146), Defense Mapping Agency, Hydrographic/Topographic Center, Washington, DC, 1986, http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/topo/nicaragua/terrabona-nicaragua-50k-3054iii-1986.pdf Appendix - Bibliography

  43. Google Earth database, Imagery Date 12/5/2010, http://www.opengis.net/kml/2.2"<coordinates>-85.9384893,12.77879224, accessed 10/07/11 Rights-Based & Benefit/Harm Analysis Silver, David. “Checklist for Project Integrity in the Context of Development as Transformation.” “The Human Right to Water and Sanitation.” United Nations Website: http://www.un.org/waterforlifedecade/human_right_to_water.shtml. Accessed December 5, 2011. Appendix - Bibliography

  44. Governance Culture Matters, The Real Obstacles to Latin American Development, Oscar Arias, Foreign Affairs, January/February 2011, Vol. 90 No. 1. Ortega Won’t Let Go of Nicaragua, Mary Anastasia O’Grady, Wall Street Journal, 10/31/11. The New Nicaraguan Water Law In Context – Institutions and Challenges for Water Management and Governance, Paula Novo and Alberto Garrido (University of Madrid), International Food Policy Research Institute, July 2010, http:// www.ifpri.org/publications Appendix - Bibliography

  45. Department of Matagalpa Community Resources, http://fincaelcoqui.com/city-of-matagalpa-nicaragua/ Bean Growing Environments in Nicaragua, Michigan State Universary, 2001https://www.msu.edu/~bernsten/beanatlas/Country%20Pages--withGIS/Nicaragua/2.BeanGrowingEnvironments/nicaragua_text_bean_growing_environments.htm Climate and Weather:http://www.worldweatheronline.com/weather-averages/Nicaragua/1616762/Matagalpa/1618707/info.aspx Consolidated Data by Health Post In Region, Including Gastrointestinal, Respriatory and Skin Infections, -(Need source document) Appendix - Bibliography

  46. Municipality of Terrabona – Appraisal Analysis Terrabona en cifras, InstitutoNacional de Informacion de Sarrollo, (INIDE), Marzo, 2008, www.inide.gob.ni, (personal communication from Chalie Z. Nevarez. October 2011) Field Notes of Visited Communities (of Terrabona, including Monte Verde), El Provenir, June 9, 2011, (personal communication from Chalie Z. Nevarez. October 2011) Drought Sweeps Terrabona, Local Newspaper clipping dated June 6, 2011, (personal communication from Chalie Z. Nevarez. October 2011) Clean Water for Nicaragua, El Porsvenir, not dated, (personal communication from Chalie Z. Nevarez. October 2011) Terrabona Results (a spreadsheet analysis of water, sanitation and hygiene indicators), (personal communication from Chalie Z. Nevarez. October 2011) Appendix - Bibliography

  47. Community of Monte Verde- Appraisal Analysis Monteverde Household Interview Data, El Provenir, June 13-14, 2011, (Water, sanitation and hygiene data for 17 households in Phase I area of Monte Verde community. (personal communication from Chalie Z. Nevarez. October 2011) Photos of Monte Verde Households and Community Infrastructure, El Provenir, June 2011, (personal communication from Chalie Z. Nevarez. October 2011) Appendix - Bibliography

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