Haiti Water Initiative

Haiti Water Initiative

 OUR HAITI WATER PROJECT: EXCERPTS FROM OUR PAST EFFORTS Why spend money shipping water to Haiti when we could be sending water filters so they could have their own clean water? Think sustainability...

We had several good reasons for sending water filters to Haiti: Cholera is spread through contaminated water; bottled water is heavy and very expensive to ship and the empty bottles are creating plastic mountains. People should not be compelled to beg for life giving resources. Will a $20.00 water filter change the World? probably not by itself but if we send enough filters to change a family, school, a church or a village into a more sustainable, safer place to drink water, we may begin attracting attention to a new strategy and changing one small corner of the World.

The filter our we researched and selected is affordable ($20) can provide over 40 gallons per day of drinkable water from puddles...for a year. With Haiti's shipping infrastructure in ruins, we had to create opportunities for church groups and relief workers to deliver the filters for us, directly to those in need.

For more specific information on these filters, already in use in Haiti and elsewhere in the world, use this link: http://www.justwater.me/

 

Haiti Water Initiative: Final Report

Haiti Water Project Final Report, May 8, 2011

by Gordon Peabody, Director of Safe Harbor Environmental ,  May 2011

Belle Vue, Haiti image by Joe "Bones"

Belle Vue, Haiti image by Joe "Bones"

Because it has always been available to us, we rarely pause to consider how critical water is or what it would be like to live without safe drinking water. I believe drinking water may also become an ever more expensive commodity, as multi national corporations engage in efforts to control our source aquifers. One way to protect resources is through reuse and water is a perfect example. We had been researching nano technology for several months and printed an article in OCEAN Environmental newsletter on nano filters revolutionizing water purification.

When I realized how much bottled water was being shipped to Haiti and how expensive it was to ship the water, I felt that we should explore a more sustainable alternative, such as sending water filters. A gallon of water costs approximately $ 4 to ship to Haiti (in pallets of 1,700 half liter bottles). This does not reflect the costs of bottling, handling, distribution and disposal of plastic bottles or the carbon footprint of bottling, delivery and distribution. Kristyna researched the new technology for us and discovered a filter, produced by a church organization in Texas, that cost approximately $20.00.

For what it would cost to ship 5 gallons of water to Haiti, we would be able to send a filter that could produce up to 70 gallons a day, for up to a year.  Each day of use would save hundreds of dollars in shipping costs. Over the course of a year, the savings could be better spent on other relief supplies. People caught up in complex distribution efforts would now be able to build homes and schools. Sending cases of filters could provide enough savings to rebuild schools. We ordered our first case.

We needed to try and get as many filters in use as possible because cholera was beginning to make inroads. My sister Deborah offered to contact local churches and see if they would donate a few filters. The Provincetown Banner wrote an article on what we were trying to accomplish. The results were unexpected. To date we have received donations of just over $4,000.

Getting the filters safely into a chaotic region with no infrastructure and no addresses was another challenge We had a friend, working with an international aid organization, building schools and tent homes, in the areas hit by earthquake and hurricane. He advised us not to ship anything to Haiti. He was expected to return to the Cape briefly in December and offered to hand deliver filters for us. That return to Cape Cod was interrupted by riots and passport issues. He reported to us that he was barricaded in a Port au Prince schoolyard. Things were beginning to get complicated, we had cases of water filters outside our office in Wellfleet and our courier was barricaded in a schoolyard in Haiti.  I asked Kristyna Smith, the Safe Harbor researcher who had originally discovered the filters, to step in as project coordinator. Smith is an Orleans resident who was a psychology major at Framingham State. Kristyna suddenly had a lot of work.

Through Pru Sowers, the Provincetown Banner reporter who had written about our project, we were contacted by a pilot who delivered medical supplies across Haiti. The pilot gave us links to some church groups with members who regularly traveled to the Port au Prince area. This information was passed on to Kristyna, We developed some guidelines: the filters needed to go to areas suffering from both the earthquake and the hurricane. we had to locate trusted couriers; and another tricky part, the couriers, who would be mostly members of church groups around the country, had to be willing to smuggle these filters into Haiti in their luggage. This last detail was necessary to avoid a $100 luggage surcharge and avoided “complicated package inspections”. We intended to keep these filters off the black market.

Many of our filters went to schools, directly to teachers or through people building the schools. We know our filters are currently being used in approximately 17 small villages the church groups went to. Two cases of filters were delivered to the village of Belle Vue Haiti, where SASH (SASHHaiti.org) has been working, Kristyna reports that some of the couriers didn’t respond to us when they first returned to the US because they were so sick and exhausted.

Joe "Bones" Courier (Left), Gordon Peabody Director (Right)

Joe "Bones" Courier (Left), Gordon Peabody Director (Right)

Special thanks to our most effective courier , Joe "Bones", shown here with Safe Harbor Director Gordon Peabody.

This story wouldn’t be complete without acknowledging hundreds of Cape Cod residents, donating by mail or anonymously, in churches or at the Wellfleet Preservation Hall Holiday Festival. Cape Codders, donating water filters to strangers they may never meet. Thanks to the Churches of Provincetown and Truro for their generous support of children and families in need, in a world so very different from ours. Thank you to the others, like the family from Utah, who sent us a check at Christmas: “we have everything we need, our family wants to contribute to your Haiti Water project”.  As if that weren’t enough: A girl Scout Troop from Eastham donated their 50 cents dues for a month towards sending water filters to Haiti.

We are printing up thank you post cards for as many addresses as we have but the whole story won’t end there, it continues with the Haitian people, being a little less dependent on imported water and a little healthier. We are planning to transfer the Haiti Water Project to a local non-profit group, and have also provided information to Sean Penn's organization in Haiti.

Link below to local newspaper article

http://www.wickedlocal.com/wellfleet/features/x1651493005/Water-filters-make-their-way-to-Haiti-as-part-of-Outer-Cape-fundraising-effort

Haiti Water Initiative: Personal Statement

Personal statement: Deborah Peabody, Safe Harbor Haiti Water Project Donations Coordinator, March 2011

Deborah Peabody, Donations Coordinator

Deborah Peabody, Donations Coordinator

I was painfully aware of the suffering in Haiti even before the devastating earthquake.  Then the storms and floods began.  When I began hearing about the cholera outbreak it was enough to make me want to turn off the news, I felt so helpless and sad.  Then my brother called.  "Isn't cholera transmitted by dirty water?" he asked.  He told me that he had found some simple, effective, affordable water filters intended for use in rustic areas.  He'd already ordered a case to be sent to Haiti and had found a way to get them there.  "Seems to be a better investment than medicine,” he said.  As we continued discussing the possibilities my hope began to return.  Gordon wondered aloud if local churches might be willing to buy more filters to send.  I contacted people I knew from each of 3 local churches and the word went out.  The first church, the first week, got donations for an entire case of filters.  From there the donations continued to grow.  It seemed that anyone who heard about the effort wanted to buy at least one filter.  I think they felt, as I did, such happiness at being able to do something so helpful for so little.  I was particularly moved at the Holiday Craft Fair in Wellfleet when people in the midst of stressful gift shopping stopped at our booth and, excited to hear about the possibility of giving such a significant gift to people they didn't know, donated generously. I have seldom been involved in a project that did so much to restore my faith in people and gave me so much joy.

Haiti Water Initiative: Personal Statement

 

Personal statement: Kristyna Smith, Safe Harbor Haiti Water Project Coordinator, March 2011

Kristyna Smith, Water Project Coordinator

Kristyna Smith, Water Project Coordinator

It is amazing how our Haiti Water Project at Safe Harbor has progressed in just a few short months! When I was first introduced to the innovative new filters I never expected it to be more than just a research project, but before I knew it we had sent for our first order of filters. We were uncertain of the project;s future at this point as we hadn’t any idea whether or not we would receive donations. Uncertainty didn’t last long; generous donations began pouring in to help send these filters to Haiti. It has been so great to be a part of this. I have had the opportunity to communicate and meet with so many generous people who actively participate in the relief efforts and rebuilding of the Haitian community. By spreading knowledge of this sustainable solution I know our efforts will make a difference.

Haiti Water Initiative Follow-Up

Update: We were unprepared for the overwhelmingly generous responses, from Churches, individuals, Girl Scout Troops and families from Cape Cod and all over the country. Our filters have been making their way into the parts of Haiti that have been struck by the earthquake and then the hurricane. They have been hand carried by volunteer couriers, who have distributed them to schools and family groups. We are about to receive photos and will post them here. The letters of gratitude have been heartbreaking.....we will post some of these also this month. Communications have been sketchy and deteriorating from Haiti and we have had to be patient. Thank you to everyone who believes in sustainable solutions. The letter we wrote to the UN presented cost benefit ratios for sending filters instead of water...we will be posting that startling material as well. gordon peabody, 2/0-4/11spring 2011

Haiti Water Initiative: UPDATE

Christmas update: the first cases of filters are on their way to be distributed in Haiti, hand carried by a medical team member. A second delivery will be made by a friend who is involved in an aid organization. He will be delivering a boat to Haiti and a third delivery may be made by volunteers working for an aid agency in Miami. Thank you to the hundreds of people, organizations and churches that have supported this project. A special thank you goes out to two people, Kristyna Smith and Deborah Peabody, who work as project coordinator and fund raising coordinator, respectively.

Kristyna Smith, Haiti Water Initiative, Project Coordinator

Kristyna Smith, Haiti Water Initiative, Project Coordinator

Deborah Peabody, Haiti Water Initiative, fund raising coordinator

Deborah Peabody, Haiti Water Initiative, fund raising coordinator

Thank you for supporting sustainable solutions, Gordon Peabody, Director, Safe Harbor