Title: Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) in Nigeria
1Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) in Nigeria
2What do we mean by Sanitation?
Environmental Sanitation Solid Waste Industrial
waste
Water Sanitation Hygiene Excreta
Disposal Sewerage, Sullage, Strom Water Leachates
from dump sites
3Actual rate of progress compared to required
rates for achieving MDG Sanitation Target
Approximately 90 Million Nigerians lack improved
sanitation
4What is CLTS?
- Focus on stopping open defecation. Safe excreta
disposal any technology will do. - No subsidy
- Facilitation Not education.
- Relies on a walk of shame as a trigger peer
pressure. - Sanitation is a collective responsibility.
5Community Led
6latrines hand washing
7WaterAids CLTS Experience in Nigeria
- June 05 Study visits to Bangladesh
- July 05 1st pilot CLTS projects
- Late 05 CLTS written into National draft
National Water Sanitation Policy - Feb 06 Reflection Days
- Nov 06 Evaluation of First Pilot
8WaterAids CLTS Experience in Nigeria
- Jan 07 Expanded 2nd Pilot with UNICEF
- Jan 07 Development of IEC materials
- July 07 NTGS Evaluation of Second Pilot
- August 07 CLTS in National Sanitation Scale
up strategy
9- Nov 07 - CLTS in draft
national implementation guideline for
National Water Sanitation Policy/IYS Plan - Nov-Dec 07 Additional support for scale up
of CLTS - Feb- March 08 National ToT of
Facilitators towards national IYS
target of 1m latrines in 08
10Processes
- Training of WASU, NGO and WANG members in CLTS
- - Training to WASCOMs and participatory
process in community - - Awareness raising amongst communities
- Households supported to construct latrines,
supported by community contributions - Increased and regular access to water
- Community members have access to affordable
sanitation material - WASUs and NGOs regularly monitor the progress
towards CLTS
11Processes (contd)
- Behaviour Changes
- - Regular cleaning of compound
- - No open defecation, children use potty
- More frequent showering and washing clothes
- Hand washing before after eating and
defecation - Keeping animals confined to an area (in some
cases) - Regular sweeping of compound
12Evaluation of CLTS in Nigeria
13Key Evaluation Questions
- Is CLTS effective?
- a) How effective is CLTS when used as the only
approach? - b) How effective has CLTS been when
implemented in places where - other approaches have been used?
- c) How can CLTS be made more effective?
- How efficient has CLTS approach been compared to
other approaches? - Is there evidence of its rootedness, scaling up
and sustainability? - Are there counterfactual arguments?
14Results
- No open defecation in compound
- General health improvements
- Reduced incidence of diarrhoea and vomiting
- Reduced incidence of skin infections especially
amongst children - Reduced body stench easier to be next to each
other - Clean and tidy environment
- Girls and womens dignity has increased
- Less snake bites, Less flies
- Improved water supply no more fighting near
water point - Community members feel empowered
- Community members feel it is their own programme
- We can roll out the mat anywhere and lie down
and be happy - Neighbouring communities want to be like us
15Is CLTS Effective?
yes
yes
Yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
16Where CLTS is used as the only approach
- Initiative is better received
- Initial trigger is more effective
- Greater community ownership
- Obvious differences before and after, enhance
further change - Changes attributed to CLTS are much more
significant
17When there is no influence of subsidy
- Subsidy communities do not own the project
- Dependent waiting to be provided
- Negative influence by neighbouring subsidy
communities - WASUs continuing to give subsidy
- Inappropriate use of Sani Centre
18In Communities that are not urbanized
- The more urbanized the lesser the sense of
community - Larger proportion of rented accommodation
- More urban communities already have a larger
number of latrines - Many other negative influences
19When WASU has received the right training
- Training on Participatory Approaches is important
eg. Vandeikiya training - Step down training without delay
- Creating the community trigger
- Support to communities
20When there is regular monitoring
- WASU and NGOs are empowered /supported to monitor
regularly - WASU and NGO regular visiting communities
- Record keeping is facilitated
- Ensure records are kept
21Where there is a reward
- Water supply
- The promise of an additional water supply
- Visits by WESU
- 100 CLTS board
- A form of recognition of voluntary work
T-Shirts, Caps (only in Benue)
22How can CLTS be made more Effective
- Important first input - right type and level of
training - Eliminating misconceptions at the outset
- Selection of communities based on learning
- Priority to self initiation
- More regular monitoring
23Things to consider
- Mainstream gender throughout CLTS process
- Define the necessary minimum CLTS package for the
Nigerian context - Replication to new LGAs and States
24Before and After CLTS
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