1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico

by Caminos de Agua
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1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico
1 Million Liters of Safe Drinking Water in Mexico

Project Report | May 14, 2018
Here come the rains!

By Dylan Terrell | Executive Director

Celebrating a completed system in Palo Colorado
Celebrating a completed system in Palo Colorado

Dear GlobalGiving Supporters,

As the rainy season gets underway, we’re working hard to take advantage of every drop possible to help more and more people gain sustainable access to safe and healthy drinking water. We are working with old partners and have secured new ones to help take this work to the next level. 

Terreros de la Concepción 

Thanks to GlobalGiving supporters, we were able to start working in the village of Terreros de la Concepción, in collaboration with CUVAPAS (United Communities for Life and Water in English). The village has some of the worst levels of arsenic and fluoride contamination in the entire region, at 6 and 8 times above World Health Organization recommendations respectively. On top of that, community members receive this contaminated water only 1-2 days a week, because the well is shared between several villages. 

Currently, 14 families are participating in this project, all from highest part of the village where water access is even more difficult. Just this month we finished the construction of three (3), large-scale, 12,000-liter capacity ferrocement systems. The families worked hard to finish this project quickly, just in time for the rains.

There is still much more work to be done. All of the families are currently sharing the water between these three systems, but the rainwater will not last the entirety of the dry season. To make sure all families have access, we need to help them build an additional 11 systems before the end of this rainy season.

Palo Colorado

We started working in the village of Palo Colorado at the end of 2017. This project is funded by Casita Linda, another local NGO that helps low-income families build their own homes. Last month, the Caminos de Agua team arrived in the community to begin another capacity training. We were stunned to see water trucks rolling through the community and dozens of 55-gallon drums waiting to be filled.

In turns out, the community well went dry, and literally collapsed in on itself, in January – leaving 300 families without any water access. Today, families pool money to buy water or wait for the municipality who trucks in water every two weeks. Community members were waiting for us this time more anxious than ever to start building rainwater harvesting systems. More than a dozen community members, from two different villages, participated in the latest week-long capacity training, led by Caminos de Agua. 

By the end, one family had a new rainwater harvesting system, all the community members were trained on the construction process, and two local masons received a more comprehensive training to take these systems on to the next homes. In total, three of these large scale systems have been built, and four more are currently underway. 

Pozo Hondo

Big news for us here at Caminos de Agua and for our community partners. After 10 months of waiting, we just received word that we won a grant with the Gonzalo Rio Arronte Foundation (Fundación Gonzalo Río Arronte). This project will allow us to work closely with the village of Pozo Hondo, which has extremely high levels of both arsenic and fluoride in their well. Over the next months, Caminos de Agua, members of Pozo Hondo, and CUVAPAS will be working together to build 25 large-scale rainwater harvesting systems, providing safe and healthy drinking water access to nearly 400 people! 

Many thanks to the Gonzalo Rio Arronte Foundation for believing in our work and helping us get ever closer to our goal of 1 million liters of rainwater storage. 

Local High Schools

Young women from one of the high schools we worked in last year, CBTis 60, won a state-wide science award for their work with Caminos de Agua on rainwater harvesting and water treatment systems! They are going on to the national competition in Merida, México at the end of this month. Wish them luck! 

Inspired by the young women of CBTis 60, another local high school, CecyTe, reached out to Caminos de Agua to see if we can replicate the program we provided to CBTis 60 last year. With funding and logistical support from long-time partner, El Maíz Más Pequeño, we plan on starting this new collaboration with CecyTe in June. 

So, keep your eyes peeled for our next update. And for Spanish speakers, we will post the local radio interview with the CBTis 60 team on Facebook soon. 

What can you do?

In the meantime, we urge you to make a donation to support the project in the village of Terreros de la Concepción (Terreros). The water problems in this village are second to none, but the families are taking the solutions into their own hands. They are trained, organized, determined, and they have the support of a wider community network.  

GlobalGiving supporters have helped build three systems in the village, we have 11 more to go. All incoming funds will go directly to materials to build these additional 11 rainwater harvesting systems in Terreros, which will give the entire upper part of the community, or about 100 people, a lifetime of safe and healthy drinking water. 

The rains are coming! Let’s get ahead of them and help get Terreros a sustainable water supply before the dry season kicks in. 

As always, thanks to all the supporters on GlobalGiving who participate in this work. 

 

Saludos,
Dylan and the Caminos de Agua Team

 

A family in Terreros in front of their new cistern
A family in Terreros in front of their new cistern
Women putting on the finishing touches
Women putting on the finishing touches
Working together to build the first flush tank
Working together to build the first flush tank
Students interviewed on radio for their water work
Students interviewed on radio for their water work
Waiting for the rains to come in Terreros
Waiting for the rains to come in Terreros
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Organization Information

Caminos de Agua

Location: San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato - Mexico
Website:
Facebook: Facebook Page
Twitter: @caminosdeagua
Project Leader:
Dylan Terrell
San Miguel de Allende , Guanajuato Mexico
$27,307 raised of $85,000 goal
 
704 donations
$57,693 to go
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