This is a Prebyterian Church-based organization that partners with US churches and local operating groups mostly in Latin America to produce clean water for their communities.
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Usually a US church picks a Haitian organization that wants to build and run a clean water facility. The church gets training for its members at "Living Water U" and then sends them as a mission team to Haiti to train the local partners.
In FHM's case, donors have already given FHM money to build a clean water facility for the community and the Leogane Family Health Center.
So far, FHM has dug a well. This wasn't entirely straightforward - a second well had to be dug before reasonably clean water was reached. And one of the projects that Jeff has done while at the guesthouse is cleaning out faucets that collected small rocks and sand when the well water wasn't very clear.
FHM then approached Living Waters to get on their list for an installation. Because we're not fitting their usual model, and because their personnel in Haiti has been changing, it's taken us a while to get connected.
However, this week, a Living Waters staff member came by to test the water from our well, and we're hoping to get the results on Friday.
Then we'll have to get a building constructed to house the water project.
Currently we buy water for the guesthouse at 30 gourdes per 5-gallon container, or about 75 cents, delivered by a water truck that fills our 14 containers every 10 days. So that's the price to beat.
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Living Waters estimates that an initiating partner needs about $25,000 to construct and equip the water treatment building, train people in the US, travel to Haiti to train the local operating partner, maintain the equipment, and pay two Haitian technicians to run the facility.
Seems like this is a pretty cool project for a group like our Sunday School class at church. Who knows, maybe we'll be back in Haiti with Living Waters for the World?
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