International Rescue Committee (IRC)

Safe Water

Photos: 
This weekend in Delmas 60 (one of two camps in Port-au-Prince  the IRC provides with water), our environmental health team met the delivery truck to verify water quality. (Photo: Susana Ferreira/The IRC)
First they filled up two yellow bladders for the approximately 350 families in the camp and the surrounding community. (Photo: Susana Ferreira/The IRC)
Then they took a sample from the water point and tested the levels. The water was chlorinated and safe to drink. The truck driver had added chlorine solution to the water in his tank, and with the motion of driving over Port-au-Prince's rocky, rubble-filled streets, it mixed well throughout. (Photo: Susana Ferreira/The IRC)
Delmas 32, a camp where the IRC is the only international aid agency operating. Delmas 32 has no camp management, and more importantly, no water. There is a reservoir, but water trucks cannot pass through the camp's roads, so it sits empty. When the 1,500 residents here want water, they must go to a nearby kiosk and pay -- for non-potable water. With no water, no ready latrines and an ever-growing pile of garbage, this camp has a serious sanitation problem. (Photo: Susana Ferreira/The IRC)
To address the sanitation problems in Delmas 32, the IRC's environmental health team is building latrines. The IRC has also trained Community Hygiene Promoters who are chlorinating people's water until a more sustainable fix is implemented. (Photo: Susana Ferreira/The IRC)

The IRC is working to prevent the spread of cholera by making sure Haitian quake survivors living in crowded tent settlements have safe drinking water and  latrines.