Promoting the health, safety, and dignity of sanitation workers is an increasing priority within the WASH and labor sectors, but the perspective of MPEs is often absent due to heavy stigmatization and the informal nature of their work. We developed a MPE-centered approach to bring manual pit emptiers (MPEs) directly into the ongoing urban sanitation conversation. We conducted six focus group discussions (FGDs) in Senegal, Burkina Faso, Malawi, Kenya, Cameroon, and Uganda to understand the work MPEs do, how it impacts their lives, their families and their communities, and to identify opportunities for support. Local sanitation workers within each country were trained and supported to facilitate FGDs and leveraged their existing relationships within manual emptying groups to recruit participants and create a comfortable environment for them to speak openly. We also led the direct online engagement between emptiers with other WASH sector stakeholders (the first to our knowledge) in a series of webinars giving them an opportunity to share their experiences and drive conversations about how the research could be applied and what solutions and opportunities should be explored.
Webinar 1: A day in the life of a manual pit emptier
Alidou, a resident of Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso, once walked along the streets of his town while heading to work as a photographer. On the way, he noticed that there was a lot of sludge and waste water dumped in most of the residents’ premises. Moved by the situation, he decided to assist his community manage the waste. This marked the beginning of his career as a manual emptier in Ouagadougou. In most cities of developing countries, the containment, emptying, transport and treatment elements of the sanitation service value chain lack safe and proper infrastructure to serve citizens adequately. Manual emptiers like Alidou play a vital role in bridging this gap through their waste emptying and transport services. Manual emptiers often provide services in low income non-sewered areas where communities use pit latrines and septic tanks for their sanitation needs. When full, manual emptiers remove the waste using a scooping ladle or bucket and a drum-on-wheels (often called an ambulance in Nairobi). This service is most common in urban low income areas, where it is a necessity due to the tightly packed, organic layout of settlements, which makes pits inaccessible to vacuum trucks. In providing this service, manual emptiers face a myriad of challenges ranging from health and safety risks to high community stigma, alienation and working with rudimentary tools. After conducting focus group discussions (FGDs) with manual emptiers in Sub-Saharan Africa and surveying organizations that are interested in the work that manual emptiers are doing, The Centre for Affordable Water and Sanitation Technology (CAWST), Sanergy and the Pan African Association of Sanitation Actors (PASA) organized a five-part webinar series aimed at better understanding the challenges experienced by manual emptiers, the opportunities to better support them to deliver safe and high quality emptying services and to explore existing initiatives that support manual emptiers in order to identify strategies for coordination and collaboration.
Webinar 1: A day in the life of a manual emptier
Webinar 2: Understanding the emptying tools and technologies for manual pit emptying
Webinar 3: Knowledge and Skills: Capacity Development Approaches for Manual Pit Emptiers
Webinar 4: Collaborating Effectively with Manual Pit Emptiers
Webinar 5: Building an Enabling Environment for Manual Pit Emptying
Ruthie Rosenberg
ruthie.rosenberg@fresh-life.org
Serafina Buzby
serafina.buzby@fresh-life.org
Capacity developmentMarket developmentCitiesOperation, maintenance and sustainable servicesGlobalEmptying and transport (non sewered)Enabling environment and institutional strengtheningOther funding source or unspecifiedFaeces or faecal sludgeGreywater or wastewaterUrinePeri-urbanUrban (entire city)Urban informal settlements (slums)EducatorsPoliticians and local decision makersPractitionersOtherPrivate sector, including social enterprisesGender equality