Obaria Beach WASH Initiative
Community Hygiene & Sanitation Infrastructure
The Immediate Crisis
In crowded, resource-limited settlements like Obaria Beach, poor sanitation is a direct catalyst for public health disasters. Prior to our intervention, the complete absence of public latrines forced residents into the highly dangerous practice of open defecation. Concurrently, a severe lack of formal solid waste management meant that garbage accumulated rapidly in public spaces and overgrown brush. This unchecked pollution contaminated the local water supply, degraded the environment, and created ideal breeding grounds for disease vectors. The result was a high transmission rate of preventable, waterborne illnesses that kept children out of school and adults out of work.
Our Intervention: Sustainable Infrastructure
Bero Ngima CBO approached this crisis by combining durable physical infrastructure with aggressive behavioral change campaigns. To eradicate open defecation, we constructed two major public latrine and washroom facilities in high-traffic areas. To guarantee long-term sustainability, these facilities operate on a micro-revenue model. Small user fees are directly reinvested into the daily cleaning, maintenance, and vital upkeep of the blocks, ensuring they remain hygienic and operational without relying on continuous donor funding.
Furthermore, we systematically tackled the solid waste crisis. We procured and installed 100 communal waste bins and dedicated recycling points across the settlement to encourage strict waste segregation at the source. To physically reclaim the environment, we mobilized hundreds of local volunteers to execute 10 massive waste disposal and bush-clearing campaigns, stripping away the overgrown areas that previously harbored disease.
The Human Impact
The environmental and health transformation of Obaria Beach is highly measurable. Through the strategic placement of accessible latrines and intensive community education, we have effectively eliminated the practice of open defecation in the targeted zones. Today, over 1,000 residents have formally adopted consistent, daily hygiene and waste segregation habits. This profound shift in community behavior has directly correlated with a sharp reduction in localized illness rates, proving that a clean environment is the foundation of a healthy, productive population.