Community initiative for efficient management of rural water supply in Assam

The participatory demand driven approach and awareness generation amongst the community is needed for total water security and safety.
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Drinking Water Supply in rural areas of Assam ( India ) is managed by the Public Health Engineering Department (PHED), Government of Assam and the challenge is indeed enormous and achieving the targets requires well planned and strongly determined strategies and approach. Government has already formulated the necessary strategy to ensure sustained supply of safe drinking water in rural areas. However for achieving the desired end results from the Government initiatives, the community needs to be mobilized to own and sustain these programmes and to become an active partner in their implementation. For such a participatory demand driven approach, necessary awareness generation amongst the Community to realize the need for “total water security” and its impact on reduction of water borne diseases, is highly warranted.

In this backdrop, it is henceforth imperative that the policies, guidelines and implementation mechanisms be focused as decentralized, community-based, simple and yet reliable systems of drinking water supply, that be managed and owned by the users; which would ensure sustainability of the drinking water supply.

Despite such deep focus, it is becoming increasingly evident the Government might not be able to provide the quality services for good to a growing population. The felt need at this juncture is that the role of Government needs to shift from service provider to that of a facilitator. If such is to happen, then Government will provide financial and policy support to the communities and community level institutions for fulfilling the desired levels of services on a sustainable basis.  

Under such ongoing reform initiatives, the

Public Health Engineering Department (PHED), Assam

for active participation in the O&M of rural water supply schemes

its regular O&M, creating social responsibilities in the form of ownership, regular supply of water

Such endeavour has succeeded to shift the responsibility and the ownership of the rural PWSS to the community (users / beneficiaries) in a result oriented manner. Active participation of the Water Users Committees has resulted

social accountability

To boost such efforts, the Government of Assam has introduced last year,

two State Level Awards

“Uttam Gramya Pani Jogan Parichalana Puraskar (UGPJPP)”

Gramya Jalamitra Puraskar (GJP)”

10 Nos

3 Nos

Hon’ble Chief Minister of Assam

true spirit of cooperation and involvement

The impact of these social movements on rural drinking water supply has already become transparent through Social Accountability, which refers to the users' point of view - addressing demands / sustainability of supply and its water sources. Rural water supply by default itself is Social Accountability cum Responsibility of the concerned department and the development agents, like NGO, CBO etc. and above all, the Community to ensure safe drinking water for all. So it should be properly advocated to ensure the effective social mobilization and there comes the profound role of development workers / agencies to support the Government approach and activities to pave the ways for fruit bearing implementation to control

drinking water borne risks

Water Safety and Security

India Water Portal
www.indiawaterportal.org