Community Development Group Annual Work Plan (2009-10)

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Community Development Group Annual Work Plan (2009-10)

Transcript of Community Development Group Annual Work Plan (2009-10)

Page 1: Community Development Group Annual Work Plan (2009-10)

Community Development Group

Annual Work Plan (2009-10)

Page 2: Community Development Group Annual Work Plan (2009-10)

Outline of the presentation

• 1. Lessons Learned

• 2. Challenges

• 3. Implementation strategies (2009-10)

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1. Lessons

Strong commitment and sense of ownership in traditional schemes than modern ones

• focus on a single function of the water management

• Appropriate design of bylaws and their effective implementation

• use of indigenous knowledge in in-take and canal construction

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• The sustainability of the traditional schemes indicated that there is a potential to replicate and learn from this model

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Sustainability in irrigation schemes is the result of the

• WUA’s strong commitment and the participation of community from the very beginning (decision making)

• Recognize the indigenous knowledge of the community

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• The co-existence side by side of WUA and multi-purpose cooperatives is possible. (Case studies)

• The IC/WUAs by-laws are in many ways a duplication of MC, which seems to dilute the required focus on by-laws for effective water management

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2. Challenges

Sense of ownership and responsibility

found to be below the required level.• this attribute mainly to low real-community

/beneficiary participation from the very beginning (Planning phase) of some modern irrigation schemes

• Dependency syndrome in food insecure Kebeles/communities

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• Lack of clearly defined mandates of PIs as a result of the current BPR

• Negatively affects in implementation of PIs planned capacity building activities

• Confusion at woreda (IDDP Vs CPA) level result in low level of follow-up at the planned project activities

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• Instability and turnover of staff hamper sustainability of project activities

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3. Implementation strategies(2009-10)

A. Focus on community level capacity building and institutionalizing of project activities

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Initiate, organize and conduct stakeholders consultative meetings at woreda level including:

• community representatives• Kebele level officials• Woreda and regional PIs(the experience of East Belessa)

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During the meeting:Evaluate activities performed so far and

identify gapsworkout detail action plans on a

participatory basis and redefine roles and responsibilities of woreda, kebele and community

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Strengthening and empowering watershed/WUAs committees

• Institutionalize watershed committees through technical support in formulating their own by-laws on a participatory basis

• Empowering WUA/IC committees in scheme management and implementation their own bylaws

• Build the capacity of the community organizations to be involved during planning, implementing, monitoring and evaluating of the activities

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B. Review implementation modalities

Based on the recent BPR and the newly institutional arrangement:-

initiate open discussions with PIs and revise legal documents (guidelines and bylaws) to encourage community/beneficiaries participation

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The discussion should lead to:• Support and guide water users/communities

in democratically formulating their own bylaws (instead of top down models),

• Revising WUA membership rules to be inclusive of all men and women water users served by the scheme

• The focus of WUA/ICs should be on a single function of scheme operation and maintenance

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• Organize field visits with PIs and (Woreda and Zone)

• Direct contact with community representatives whenever the need arises

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. SWHISA Team coordination

• Coordination of SWHISA team has to start during planning.

• The annual plan needs further information exchange and development of team sprit.

• CDE will jointly plan and implement with all team members accordingly.

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THANK YOU