7 research outputs found

    Cost recovery for water supply, policy and practice in Bangladesh

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    The National Policy for Safe Drinking Water supply and Sanitation of Bangladesh states that “in the near future”, larger parts of the construction costs of water supply systems should be recovered from the users. Furthermore, the policy prescribes that user communities should become responsible for O&M of the water supply facilities in rural areas and should bear 100% of the costs for this. The policy states that transaction should be more towards cost recovery and financing practices for water supply should be gradual and there should be a safety net for the hard-core poor. This paper deals with the cost recovery and financing of water supply according to the National and how it is interpreted and put into practice by different organizations

    Monitoring rural water services for sound evidence-based planning and finance decision making: lessons from Ghana

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    This paper presents the evolution of the national rural water service monitoring system in Ghana. In 2015, this system has been used to collect, process and analyse monitoring data from all water facilities, service providers and service authorities in six of Ghana’s ten regions. This has confirmed the earlier findings from three pilot districts regarding the low level of compliance of water services with norms and standards and low level of performance of service providers and authorities. So far, these monitoring findings have informed evidence-based dialogue on improving water service delivery and triggered remedial actions to provide renewed access to over 15,000 water users through collaborative partnerships by the District Assemblies and development partners

    Monitoring water services in Ghana: the why, the what, the how and the cost

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    This document presents the framework for monitoring rural and small town water in Ghana It documents the processes involved in the development, testing and refinement of indicators. These indicators are based on the norms, standards and guidelines set by the Community Water and Sanitation Agency (CWSA) and were developed by its Monitoring and Evaluation Working group, with support of IRC/Triple-S staff, and in consultation with officials from different other levels. They were tested in two rounds of monitoring. In addition, the framework for moniotoring defines the different uses to which these indicators can be put and the procedure through which data are collected, processed and analysed. Also actual costs of monitoring were collected and these currently stand at 4,931to4,931 to 6,936 per district Based on these field experiences, we consider that the current framework for monitoring will be feasible for annual data collection

    The state of handpump water services in Ghana: findings from three districts

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    This paper presents findings of water service monitoring in three districts in Ghana, using the national water service monitoring framework, which has been developed, based on the norms and standards set for rural water supply by the Community Water and Sanitation Agency. Only 21% of handpumps were found to meet national norms and standards for water services in terms of reliability, accessibility, quality and quantity. Service providers who operate and maintain these handpumps also scored low on compliance with norms and guidelines related to governance, operations and financial management. The monitoring data showed positive correlations between service provider and service authority performance and service levels. Nevertheless, even service providers managing reliable handpumps were found to often not meet the benchmark on certain service provider indicators, which raises the question on whether the benchmarks on these indicators may have been set too high

    Utilitisation of rural water supply: pathways, drivers and results

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    This record includes an extended abstract and MP4 presentation. Presented at the 42nd WEDC International Conference

    District WASH master planning: Lessons learnt from Burkina Faso, Ghana and Uganda

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    This record includes an extended abstract and MP4 presentation. Presented at the 42nd WEDC International Conference

    Capacity building and innovations through joint learning: experiences with communities of practice and learning alliances [summary of panel discussion]

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    Capacity building and innovations through joint learning: experiences with communities of practice and learning alliances [summary of panel discussion
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