Port-Au-Prince: A City Of Millions, With No Sewer System
Posted: 13 April 2012 01:09 PM   [ Ignore ]
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Port-au-Prince is about the size of Chicago. But it doesn't have a sewer system. It's one of the largest cities in the world without one.

That's a big problem, but never more so than during a time of cholera.

Since cholera was introduced into Haiti 18 months ago — most likely by United Nations peacekeeping troops from Nepal, where the disease is endemic — more than a half-million people have gotten sick and at least 7,050 have died.

Public health authorities say cholera will stay in the environment for a long time, because Haiti has the worst sanitation in this hemisphere.

It's hard for Americans to imagine what this means.

The cumulative sewage of 3 million people flows through open ditches. It mixes with ubiquitous piles of garbage. Each night, an all-but-invisible army of workers called bayakou descend into man-sized holes with buckets to remove human waste from septic pits and latrines, then dump it into the canals that cut through the city.


Follow pediatrician Vanessa Rouzier on a tour of a Port-au-Prince slum called Cite de Dieu — City of God — to get an idea of what it means to live in a city sans sanitation. The sprawling slum, close by the earthquake-ruined Presidential Palace, is home to 40,000 Haitians, including a lot of her patients.

We cross over a wide canal that cuts through the slum. The garbage-clogged channel brings sewage down from the hillside precincts of the capital.

"So you can imagine that if human waste goes through there, and if it rains, [it] just really spills into the environment and ends up in the sea," Rouzier says.

She takes us down to a small, garbage-cluttered beach on the edge of the slum and points to a ramshackle structure perched on stilts over the water. Those who have seen the movie Slumdog Millionaire will know what it is — an outhouse.

"If you live close by the water, you may use these over-the-sea hanging toilets during the daytime," Rouzier says. "But at night you wouldn't come out in the dark to use that. You would have a bowel movement in some sort of plastic bag and ... throw it out during the day out here."

Right next to the outhouse, a small fishing boat unloads its cargo. And right there on the beach, a woman sells the fish from plastic buckets.

But there are signs of hope. Only a hundred yards or so from the outhouse is a tidy-looking school for 170 students — with a brand-new, honest-to-god toilet.

The school's principal, Wilfred Elma, proudly shows it off. There are separate chambers, all spotlessly clean and odor-free. "This is for the boys, this is for the teacher, and this is for the girls," Elma says. "This is the first time they are using a toilet that smells so good."

"I think it's amazing!" Rouzier says. "These children have never had the experience of using a toilet! I don't think many ... in North America understand what that represents — that it's the first time they're using a proper toilet!"

And not only that, but this toilet is a biodigester. It recycles waste and turns it into methane gas. The principal says they'll use the gas for cooking.

It's a small step toward solving an overwhelming problem.
A truck discharges raw sewage from Port-au-Prince into a brand-new treatment plant outside the city. It's one of two that will soon handle the entire effluent from the Haitian capital, which has a population of 3 million.
John W. Poole / NPR

A truck discharges raw sewage from Port-au-Prince into a brand-new treatment plant outside the city. It's one of two that will soon handle the entire effluent from the Haitian capital, which has a population of 3 million.

An hour's drive outside Port-au-Prince there's something even more exciting — a brand-new sewage treatment plant. It's the first one in Haiti. It sits on a windswept, treeless moonscape at the foot of Morne a Cabrit, or Goat Mountain.

Wilston Etienne, who oversees the facility, stands on the unloading bay as a big tanker truck backs into position. "This is where it all starts," he says, as the truck discharges a great gush of raw sewage into the first of several treatment ponds.

Dozens of trucks bring the stuff here all day every day from Port-au-Prince. They dislodge it from private septic pits, public latrines, canals and other repositories.

Etienne, a sanitary engineer with a booming voice and a hearty laugh, works for DINEPA, Haiti's 2-year-old water and sanitation agency. He says Port-au-Prince will never have the kind of sewage system Americans are used to, with underground pipes that carry waste to a treatment plant. But this one is far better than none at all, and it's much cheaper.

Amazingly, this plant and another one 12 miles away that's about to open will handle the city's entire output. The sludge will be used for agricultural compost, and the detoxified effluent will irrigate a grove of trees to be planted around the treatment ponds. "Come back in two years, and this will look like a park," Etienne says.

Soon there will be treatment plants like this one in seven other Haitian cities. "We already have the funds," he says. The money comes from a post-earthquake donation by the Spanish government.

But Etienne says better sanitation will take a lot more than building treatment plants. "Not much attention has been paid to sanitation over the years," he says, "so people do not normally think of sanitation, in terms of their approach, their behavior and so on. So the first thing is changing that sort of mentality."

For instance, often when Haitians build a house, they don't even think about putting in a toilet. "When you make two dollars a day and you have to feed your family, the last think you think of is sanitation," Etienne says.

In fact, access to sanitary facilities in Haiti has actually gone down over the past two decades, according to the Pan American Health Organization.
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Posted: 13 April 2012 01:09 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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Etienne says the facilities don't have to be the sleek flush toilets Americans are used to. A plastic-lined pit with an outhouse is a big improvement. "I remember when I was young, our first toilet was not a sanitary toilet. It was a pit outside that had a piece of board with a hole in it," he says. "And I was fine!"

But, he sighs, people's behavior is not going to change overnight "no matter how many billions of dollars we have."

The first step, Etienne says, is to convince Haitians that when it comes to sanitation, things don't have to be like they are now.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2012/04/12/150501695/port-au-prince-a-city-of-millions-with-no-sewer-system
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Les grandes familles haïtiennes sont milliardaires en gourdes, la monnaie nationale. Nous sommes milliardaires en dollars.”
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Posted: 13 April 2012 01:21 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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Haven't we been screaming about this on Haitix for months now? I'm glad the Spanish government funded for this plant to open. This is what we really needed.
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I took a big part in sending Jean Bertrand Aristide away....they say, there are five people who sent him away, I am one of the five ~Charles H. Baker

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Posted: 13 April 2012 01:38 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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Fanm Kreyol - 13 April 2012 01:21 PM
Haven't we been screaming about this on Haitix for months now? I'm glad the Spanish government funded for this plant to open. This is what we really needed.


All of a sudden NPR is doing these stories on infrastructure. Last was something Gunner posted on water issues. I wonder if Haiti will ever find the money to tackle these problems. it's possible but it takes focus.
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Les grandes familles haïtiennes sont milliardaires en gourdes, la monnaie nationale. Nous sommes milliardaires en dollars.”
-Maarten Boute, Digicel

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Posted: 13 April 2012 07:33 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
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Benz - 13 April 2012 01:38 PM
Fanm Kreyol - 13 April 2012 01:21 PM
Haven't we been screaming about this on Haitix for months now? I'm glad the Spanish government funded for this plant to open. This is what we really needed.


All of a sudden NPR is doing these stories on infrastructure. Last was something Gunner posted on water issues. I wonder if Haiti will ever find the money to tackle these problems. it's possible but it takes focus.


The battle must continue.

Infrastructure vs NGO.

There's only one pot of money, and right now, the NGO/Democrat Party control it.

That means even GREATER authority placed in the NGO side as long as Obama remains president.

Not his fault, he's just following orders.

There will be NO CHANGE in Haiti unless he's defeated.

Not a matter of political preference, just reality.
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Posted: 14 April 2012 08:07 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
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Posted: 14 April 2012 09:05 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 6 ]
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If there is one thing we should be "begging" for, this is it.
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I took a big part in sending Jean Bertrand Aristide away....they say, there are five people who sent him away, I am one of the five ~Charles H. Baker

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Posted: 30 April 2012 01:52 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 7 ]
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Posted: 21 May 2012 05:17 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 8 ]
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gunner - 14 April 2012 08:07 PM
sewers-1.jpg


Okay!

Haitians are shitting in the river/ocean or in shit holes throughout P au P.

So what does the Clinton Global Initiative do?

Build a Football stadium!

delos.jpg

delos1.jpg

delos2.jpg

Check out that advisory board!

It reads like a Who's Who of CNN TV personality's!

That's the best solution they can come up with?

Ignore the sewage and build a stadium?

5 star hotels and a football stadium.

Slick Willy is hard at work "Aiding The Poor" of Haiti.
[ Edited: 22 May 2012 08:13 AM by gunner ]
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