The Water Project’s WaSH program in Western Kenya aims to access, protect, filter, and purify the abundant waters that are available through two seasonal rains, prevalent springs, high water tables, and deep aquifers in the region. Explore water projects in communities, schools, and churches in Western Kenya such as protected springs, rainwater catchment systems, and water wells. This program emphasizes the power of strategic geographical saturation of projects, effective hygiene and sanitation training, and relational networking between NGOs, health workers, local politicians, and educators.
Springs are water sources that come from deep underground, where the water is filtered through natural layers until it is clean enough to drink. Once the water pushes through the surface of the Earth, however, outside elements like waste and runoff can contaminate the water quickly. We protect spring sources from contamination with a simple waterproof cement structure surrounding layers of clay, stone, and soil. This construction channels the spring’s water through a discharge pipe, making water collection easier, faster, and cleaner. Each spring protection also includes a chlorine dispenser at the waterpoint so community members can be assured that the water they are drinking is entirely safe. Learn more here!
Rehabilitation Project
Rehabilitation is not just fixing a pump - it’s total community re-engagement.
There’s only one thing we can think of that might be worse than not having safe water: having safe water, and then losing it because a project fell into disrepair.
Rehabilitation often proves to be a big challenge, as many wells have sit idle for years and there is typically little information about the specifics of the well. A borehole and dug well rehabilitation involves quite a bit of discovery. First, our teams work to discover as much as they can about the initial project. What materials were used? Was the borehole/hand-dug well properly constructed? Many of these questions can only be answered by diving in, and doing “the work” which makes up a rehabilitation.
Once our teams have found the problem, they find the solution. Then, they reconstruct the well and install a hand pump.
Engagement and training with communities takes into account rehabilitation was needed and alters the program to suit the needs of the community. After all - engaging with this community in the same way which led to the initial, failed project will not bring new results. Our teams work to understand the social and support reasons leading to initial failure, and make those areas a focus of our ongoing engagement with communities.
Local Leadership
Water projects don’t last long without the help of local leaders. They’re the ones who explain the situation on the ground to us (and our donors!) while also outlining our goals and intentions for the community members.
The Water Project identifies, supports, and partners with local organizations that share our vision of reliable, verifiable, and clean water. Together, we build lasting local solutions and undertake ongoing monitoring and resolution to ensure our solutions are still working years into the future.
Community Engagement
We engage the communities we work with at every step of a water project.
These interactions are rooted in relationship-building. We involve the community in implementation, set expectations for water point management, prepare community members for ongoing costs, and more. All of this happens before a water project is installed.
The people receiving a water project get a leading seat at the table. Every water project we implement requires negotiations with several interested parties. During this step and every other, we continuously try to embody our favorite ideals: reliability, relationship, and trust.
Chlorine Dispenser
We install uniquely engineered chlorine dispensers at all of our spring protection projects so community members can treat their water with a pre-measured dose of chlorine. Diluted chlorine is a regular part of water treatment, worldwide. The chlorine stays active for two to three days, ensuring water stays safe to use even when stored at home. Both the chlorine delivery and the maintenance of these dispensers are a part of our ongoing community support.
Sanitation Platform (SanPlat)
Easily made latrine slabs encourage household bathroom construction.
Proper hygiene and sanitation facilities go hand-in-hand with access to clean, reliable water.
A SanPlat is most literally the slab one would squat over when utilizing the bathroom.
The community chooses 5 households to receive SanPlats made on site under our training and guidance. The goal: seeing the need for safe latrines throughout their community, each household will be inspired to build their own.
Hygiene and Sanitation Training
For many communities, water is just the beginning. Living without water deprioritizes things that deplete water rations, like bathing, cleaning, and even handwashing. Also, in some cases, community members who couldn’t afford to go to school never learned topics usually covered in health classes. A steady water supply on its own won’t solve these issues, which is why we train the people in every community, school, and health center we provide with a water project.
Although we tailor the subjects we cover in each training to each region and community, there are some staples we always touch on: water handling and storage; personal and environmental hygiene; disease transmission; how to form and maintain a water user committee; and the operation/maintenance of the community’s new water project.
With each training, our goal is to empower communities to take back their personal health so growth and development can begin.
Monitoring and Resolution
Sub-Saharan Africa is littered with broken and abandoned wells installed by well-meaning people.
We love celebrating when a project is complete and a community has access to clean, safe water. However, reliability is the true measure of our impact.
Water can only transform lives if it’s always there. Water-fetchers need to know that when they visit one of our water points, there will always be water. Sometimes, it only takes one sip of dirty water to make someone sick, even if they’d been drinking clean water for months beforehand.
This is why we measure our water projects’ downtime in hours, not days or weeks. Each hour is critical to someone’s life, and each hour someone has to wait for clean water is another opportunity to go back to the rivers, swamps, and scoop holes they resorted to before our water project was installed. Our past water projects are just as important as what we tackle in the future.
The Water Project monitors all of our water projects to make sure water service continues. To learn more about how you can help with ongoing monitoring, evaluation, and resolution, read about The Water Promise: a group of amazing, world-changing monthly donors who understand the power of keeping water flowing long after the installation is done.
Project Timeline FAQ
Project Status
We’re working hard to make sure your gifts result in a lasting water project for the community it serves. Our engagement with a community begins many months before construction and lasts years after construction. The timeline here is focused on the physical construction of the water project. There is also training and engagement work that has already started.
Water project construction in the developing world is hard work. A lot of things can and do cause delays - which are normal. We attempt to make our best judgment of when construction will be complete, but the circumstances surrounding actual "in the field" conditions are far from our control.
Weather, supply availability, government paperwork, and progress of community involvement are just a few of the variables that can delay (and sometimes speed up) a project's completion.
We will always tell you if anything changes. And, if you get a notice like this – it’s actually further proof your gifts are being carefully used towards a water project that lasts.
Click icons to learn about each feature.
Report Submitted by Jacklyne Chelagat, Impact Communication Officer
Jacklyne loves seeing lives transformed by clean water. She is currently pursuing her degree in development studies and looks forward to how that will add even more value to her relationships with communities.
Jacklyne has been a Impact Communication Officer since 2014, with WeWaSaFo, The Water Project's trusted partner in our Western Kenya WaSH Program.
"It is said that love prevails over anything bad. I got married in this community some 20 years ago and when I was sent by my mother-in-law to fetch water, I was shocked and felt so sick to see the water source. I almost ran away but due to the love for my husband, I persevered," shared Mrs. Khamasi.
"In truth, we have suffered in terms of getting dirty and unsafe water from the spring for quite a long time."
Some 420 people in Mutao use the water from Kenya Spring for drinking, cooking, cleaning, and bathing. It is saddening to see the kind of dirty water that people are consuming every day.
Especially when thinking of the children, whose immunity is not strong enough to fight many of the germs found in this dirty water. The spring is found deep in a valley, where the hills allow rainwater to carry even more contaminants into the water.
The community reports that for as long as they can remember, they have been dealing with water-related diseases such as typhoid and diarrhea. They have been using a lot of resources to treat these illnesses.
An average day begins at 5:30am in the morning and ends at 8pm in the evening. In the morning, women wake up to prepare their children for school. After the children leave, women are responsible for house chores before they join husbands on the farm. Most people in this community depend on the farming of sugarcane plantations. They plant maize, beans, and plantains at the household level.
This region is known for bullfighting, where local cows are trained and brought together to fight. Local alcohol is brewed and consumed at high levels. The brew is referred to as "malwa."
The majority of people survive on less than a dollar per day. Most of the young people are unemployed, and it’s out of this frustration that they turn to excessive malwa consumption. The living standards in Mutao Village are low, and life expectancy is also low.
What we can do:
Training
Community members will attend hygiene and sanitation training for at least two days. This training will ensure participants have the knowledge they need about healthy practices and their importance. The facilitator plans to use PHAST (Participatory Hygiene and Sanitation Transformation), CLTS (Community-Led Total Sanitation), ABCD (Asset-Based Community Development), group discussions, handouts, and demonstrations at the spring. One of the most important topics we plan to cover is the handling, storage, and treatment of water. Having a clean water source will be extremely helpful, but it is useless if water gets contaminated by the time it’s consumed. Handwashing will also be a big topic.
Training will also result in the formation of a committee that will oversee operations and maintenance at the spring. They will enforce proper behavior around the spring and delegate tasks that will help preserve the site, such as building a fence and digging proper drainage. The fence will keep out destructive animals, and the drainage will keep the area’s mosquito population at a minimum.
Sanitation Platforms
On the final day of training, participants will select five families that should benefit from new concrete latrine floors.
Training will also inform the community and selected families on what they need to contribute to make this project a success. They must mobilize locally available materials, such as bricks, clean sand, hardcore, and ballast. The five families chosen for sanitation platforms must prepare by sinking a pit for the sanitation platforms to be placed over. All community members must work together to make sure that accommodations and food are always provided for the work teams.
Spring Protection
Protecting the spring will ensure that the water is safe, adequate and secure. Construction will keep surface runoff and other contaminants out of the water. With the community’s high involvement in the process, there should be a good sense of responsibility and ownership for the new clean water source.
Fetching water is predominantly a female role, done by both women and young girls. Protecting the spring and offering training and support will, therefore, help empower the female members of the community by giving them more time and efforts to engage and invest in income-generating activities.
Project Updates
January, 2021: Through Their Eyes: COVID-19 Chronicles with Jacob Likuyi
This post is part of a new series by The Water Project meant to highlight the perspectives and experiences of the people we serve and how the COVID-19 pandemic is impacting them. We invite you to read more of their stories here.
Jacob Likuyi is a man who wears many hats - or, perhaps more accurately, helmets.
By trade, Jacob is a 45-year-old boda boda, or motorbike taxi driver. A profession typically filled by younger men, Jacob doesn't let his age hold him back from his livelihood. Jacob's verve and friendly smile quickly gives away his good nature, even before speaking with him. And with only his grandchildren around since the start of the pandemic, he has no choice but to keep up his pace in all aspects of his current life.
Jacob Likuyi outside his home
By passion, Jacob serves as his area's Community Health Volunteer. In this position, Jacob liaises between his community and groups promoting improved health, hygiene, and sanitation practices - like our team - to bring important information to his village. Jacob and other Community Health Volunteers like him have been critical in helping rural villages fight and control the pandemic.
More people than ever before are now turning to Community Health Volunteers to share their expertise and guidance communicated from the national Ministry of Health to help themselves and their families stay safe from the virus.
Jacob enjoying the water from Kenya Spring
During a recent visit to Mutao to monitor their water point, Kenya Spring, Jacob shared his story of how the coronavirus is impacting his life and his community. Field Officer Jacky Chelagat met Jacob outside his home to conduct the interview. Both Jacky and Jacob observed physical distancing and other precautions throughout the visit to ensure their health and safety. The following is Jacob's story, in his own words.
What is one thing that has changed in your community since the completion of the water project?
"Health problems have reduced to zero and this has enabled our community to engage in different development activities which, in return, earns them a better living than before."
How has having a clean water point helped you through the pandemic so far?
"The sufficient flow of clean water has greatly helped the community to practice frequent handwashing and improve hygiene and sanitation standards in their homes."
Washing his hands at home using soap and water from Kenya Spring
Since the outbreak of COVID-19 in Kenya, has fetching water changed for you because of restrictions, new rules, or your concerns about the virus?
"It has slightly changed; community members go in shifts to ensure that there is no congestion at the spring. Members have been advised to wear masks, observe the social distance, and to take minimum time fetching water. "
How has COVID-19 impacted your family?
"Generally it has affected the social ties we used to have as a family. Having my sons living and working in the city of Nairobi has limited them from visiting and interacting with their wives, children, and me. On the other hand, it's so sad to see children staying at home instead of going to schools to be empowered. "
At home with his grandchildren
What other challenges are you experiencing due to the COVID-19 pandemic?
"Being a motorcycle rider, it has limited me on the number of clients I carry on my motorbike. Due to restrictions on much movement, there are no clients to ferry. This has resulted in less cash accrued. "
What hygiene and sanitation steps have you and your community taken to stop the spread of the virus?
"Wearing masks, social distancing, and washing hands."
Jacob masked up
What restriction are you still looking forward to being lifted?
"Children going back to school and resuming their learning immediately will be a great achievement."
Since we spoke with Jacob, the Kenyan government fully reopened all school levels to in-person learning. Students' first day back was January 4, 2021.
Watering his crops at home
What has been the most valuable part of the COVID-19 sensitization training you received from our team?
"The entire sensitization training was helpful. Community members followed the teachings to the letter. As we speak, not a single case of COVID-19 has been reported in our community."
July, 2020: COVID-19 Prevention Training Update at Mutao Community, Kenya Spring
We are carrying out awareness and prevention trainings on the virus in every community we serve. Very often, our teams are the first (and only) to bring news and information of the virus to rural communities like Mutao, Kenya.
We trained more than 18 people on the symptoms, transmission routes, and prevention of COVID-19. Due to public gathering concerns, we worked with trusted community leaders to gather a select group of community members who would then relay the information learned to the rest of their family and friends.
We covered essential hygiene lessons:
- Demonstrations on how to build a simple handwashing station
- Proper handwashing technique
- The importance of using soap and clean water for handwashing
- Cleaning and disinfecting commonly touched surfaces including at the water point.
We covered COVID-19-specific guidance in line with national and international standards:
- Information on the symptoms and transmission routes of COVID-19
- What social distancing is and how to practice it
- How to cough into an elbow
- Alternative ways to greet people without handshakes, fist bumps, etc.
- How to make and properly wear a facemask.
During training, we installed a new handwashing station with soap near the community’s water point, along with a sign with reminders of what we covered.
Due to the rampant spread of misinformation about COVID-19, we also dedicated time to a question and answer session to help debunk rumors about the disease and provide extra information where needed.
We continue to stay in touch with this community as the pandemic progresses. We want to ensure their water point remains functional and their community stays informed about the virus.
September, 2019: Mutao Community, Kenya Spring Project Completed!
Mutao Community now has access to clean water! Kenya Spring has been transformed into a flowing source of water thanks to your donation. We protected the spring, provided 5 sanitation platforms to different households in the community, and we trained the community on improved sanitation and hygiene practices.
Women celebrate at the spring
Spring Protection
Community members provided all locally available construction materials, including bricks, wheelbarrows of clean sand, stones, and fencing poles. Accommodations and meals were provided for the artisan, too. The artisan enjoyed a lot of support from the community here, with women, children, and men ferrying materials to the site and all helping with the manual labor too.
Children carry stones to the spring's construction site
The Process
The spring area was excavated to create space for setting the foundation of thick plastic tarp, wire mesh, and concrete. After the base had been set, both wing walls and the headwall were set in place using brickwork. The discharge pipe was fixed low in place through the headwall to direct the water from the reservoir to the drawing area.
Community members of all ages came to help with construction
As the wing walls and headwall were curing, the stairs were set and ceramic tiles were fixed directly below the discharge pipe. This protects the concrete from the erosive force of the falling water and beautifies the spring. The process of plastering the headwall and wing walls on both sides reinforces the brickwork and prevents water from the reservoir from seeping through the walls and allows pressure to build in the collection box to push water up through the discharge pipe.
Artisans enjoying their work
The source area was filled up with clean stones and sand and covered with a thick plastic tarp to prevent potential sources of contamination. Though we ran out of stones during the initial stages of this process, when the community could not mobilize anymore from the surrounding landscape the local representative from their county assembly came in and donated the rest of the needed gravel and stones. There were no other challenges during construction after that. It took about 2 weeks of patience for the concrete to dry.
Artisan measures the discharge pipe's height
Working together to backfill the spring with stones
As soon as it was ready, people got the okay from our field officers to begin fetching clean water. We met them there to celebrate this momentous occasion. Members of the community had gathered at the spring by the time our field officers started arriving. We were welcomed by songs and the local Luhya Isukuti dance.
The local county assembly member who had helped provide the stones was also there, and in her remarks, she appreciated our team for implementing the project in Mutao. Our staff, in turn, thanked the community and the representative for supporting the project. She further urged members of Mutao to take good care of the project so that it serves them for a long time.
Rosa Kadenyi, a farmer in Mutao, spoke for the group when she shared her thoughts on the project:
"We have been [having] a difficult time while fetching water from the [unprotected] spring. Whenever it rains, the path becomes so slippery and inaccessible. We are grateful because the spring is now easily accessible. We came out in large numbers to help in the construction because we were so eager to access water from a new spring. This is the time when we say that God has visited us in person and he did not send his angels."
Sanitation Platforms
All 5 sanitation platforms have been installed. These 5 families are happy about this milestone of having a private latrine of their own and are optimistic that people will no longer leave waste outdoors. We are continuing to encourage families to finish building walls and roofs over their new latrine floors.
A family stands as proud owners of a new sanitation platform
New Knowledge
Obed Khamasi, a leader within the Mutao community, was tasked with organizing the training. He gave us the community’s preferred date for training, for he was very much aware of the community calendar when it comes to planting season and other big events.
Field Officer Jacklyne Chelagat in action, leading training
26 women, men, and children attended training, which was as expected. We did not start until noon since people in this community had requested to attend to their farms during the morning hours. This helped ensure that everyone was able to focus once they arrived. Because of the mid-day sun, the training was held under a tree for shade in Mr. Jacob Shikhule's compound. This venue was ideal since his home is adjacent to Kenya Spring and situated along the path that leads to the spring. Mr. Shikule's homestead served as a central place where each member of this community could access the training and spring with ease.
All participants were interested in and took part actively in the training. The training was organized into 2 levels across 2 days. The first level of training was predominantly practical while the second day was more theory sessions coupled with a few demonstrations. This organization encouraged active involvement and participation throughout both days.
Technical training on fencing at the spring
We covered several topics including leadership and governance; operation and maintenance of the spring; healthcare; family planning; immunizations; and the prevention and spread of disease. We also covered water treatment methods, personal care like handwashing, environmental hygiene, hygiene promotion, and many other things.
The handwashing session was very enjoyable. The facilitator demonstrated how to make and effectively use a tippy tap for handwashing, and then the fun started. Members of this community were so happy and eager to practice making a tippy tap. Each person was working hard to step on the tippy tap and wash their hands using the 10 steps.
Handwashing practice using a tippy tap
During the session on spring maintenance, we all marched to the spring and shared roles and responsibilities based on gender and age. The men were supposed to dig the drainage channel, young men were to do the fencing while women and children were supposed to plant grass. When all the groups were through we were all supposed to team up in cleaning the spring.
Working together to clean the spring
Members of this community appreciated this session's teamwork, telling us "since the creation of the heavens and the earth they have never come together to perform any task together." According to the community members who attended training, their village has only ever come together during bereavements and funerals. This training, therefore, marked the beginning of greater things that were to come to this community as a result of their newfound solidarity. At some stages of the maintenance, each group was competing with the other to see who would finish their task first. "It was just wonderful to see members of the community, local leadership, and the facilitators come together and work to achieve a common goal of accessing clean and safe water," reported our Field Officer Jacklyne Chelagat.
"As a community, we are so grateful, we have learned a lot of new and very important information," said Jackob Shikhule, a local farmer who depends on Kenya Spring for water. "During this training, we have also discovered the massive potential that lies within us. We were able to work together, share together, and we also managed to start a merry-go-round."
Training complete!
The merry-go-round Jackob mentions is a financial tool the village decided to take up after their training. It will help community members collect money from each household monthly that will be used to make loans to one household each month to work on a development goal. We heard that a majority of them are planning to use the proceeds from the merry-go-round to buy sheep, goat, poultry, and cows for rearing. We saw strong commitment and zeal in each of the group's members. Indeed water is life because the coming of this spring protection has also brought about ideas like these that have unleashed a lot of potential in the Mutao community members.
Using the same list of households the community members came up with for the merry-go-round, they also developed a duty rota for cleaning the spring. According to this arrangement, each household is supposed to clean and maintain the spring at least thrice per week.
Thank you for making all of this possible!
August, 2019: Mutao Community, Kenya Spring Underway!
Dirty water from Kenya Spring is making people in Mutao Community sick. Thanks to your generosity, we’re working to install a clean water point and much more.
Get to know this community through the narrative and pictures we’ve posted, and read about this water, sanitation and hygiene project. We look forward to reaching out with news of success!
Project Videos
Project Photos
Project Type
Springs are water sources that come from deep underground, where the water is filtered through natural layers until it is clean enough to drink. Once the water pushes through the surface of the Earth, however, outside elements like waste and runoff can contaminate the water quickly. We protect spring sources from contamination with a simple waterproof cement structure surrounding layers of clay, stone, and soil. This construction channels the spring’s water through a discharge pipe, making water collection easier, faster, and cleaner. Each spring protection also includes a chlorine dispenser at the waterpoint so community members can be assured that the water they are drinking is entirely safe. Learn more here!
Giving Update: Mutao Community, Kenya Spring
February, 2021
A year ago, your generous donation helped Mutao Community in Kenya access clean water – creating a life-changing moment for George Shikhule. Thank you!
Keeping The Water Promise
There's an incredible community of monthly donors who have come alongside you in supporting clean water in Mutao Community 2.
This giving community supports ongoing sustainability programs that help Mutao Community 2 maintain access to safe, reliable water. Together, they keep The Water Promise.
We’re confident you'll love joining this world-changing group committed to sustainability!
"Before, water from this spring was so dirty. People would take animals to drink from the water point and the animals would urinate and defecate in the same water we were supposed to fetch. It was so disturbing."
"The water point has been protected and we are now getting clean and safe water."
"We have achieved high sanitation levels, good health, and a friendly water point."
"Due to the outbreak of COVID-19, handwashing has been improved courtesy of sufficient, clean, and safe water drawn from the spring."
"We no longer face water challenges."
Navigating through intense dry spells, performing preventative maintenance, conducting quality repairs when needed and continuing to assist community leaders to manage water points are all normal parts of keeping projects sustainable. The Water Promise community supports ongoing sustainability programs that help Mutao Community 2 maintain access to safe, reliable water.
We’d love for you to join this world-changing group committed to sustainability.
The most impactful way to continue your support of Mutao Community 2 – and hundreds of other places just like this – is by joining our community of monthly givers.
Your monthly giving will help provide clean water, every month... keeping The Water Promise.