Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Spring Break Trip!

This morning, six airline tickets were purchased for our next assessment trip! There was a bit of uncertainty over who was going, when we were going and what we were even going to do exactly but that has all been settled.

Our faculty advisor Dr. Heydinger, Peace Corps volunteer Jennifer Mayo, UT Nursing graduate Megan Shaw and three students - myself, Eduardo Diaz and Andrea Orozco - will be going to Los Sanchez and La Barranca over spring break to basically figure a bunch of stuff out! I could go on for quite awhile with everything we have to do, but essentially in Los Sanchez we're going to check out the last project to ensure everything's good, and figure out what the next project is going to be. Along with that we are going to perform a health assessment of both Los Sanchez and La Barranca.

Speaking of La Barranca, we're going to gather some information for that project as well, but a full assessment for that project will be performed in mid May. We were going to do it here in March, but there was uncertainty surrounding whether or not there are currently facilities in Honduras with the capability to test water quality, which is a crucial part of that project. We will likely send down a small team (mentor and two students) after exams finish up in early May.

Thanks for reading....we'll keep you updated!

-Adam Dellinger

Monday, December 28, 2009

An Update

Hello!

Hate to say it, but this was somewhat of a languid semester, and the Honduran government and Roberto Micheletti are mostly to blame. Since the coup that occured there on June 28, 2009, the country hasn't exactly been a war zone but there was enough uncertainty that we couldn't travel down there at least until the elections (November 29) were complete, and probably until after the new President starts his new term (January 27, 2010). Since we didn't really have approval for a project we didn't start heavy fundraising until recently.

You may be asking, approval for what? Well, I should probably start by saying that we did finish our first project in Los Sanchez, Honduras in May of 2009. The people in this small village now have clean drinking water from a spring being delivered to them through a gravity-fed pipeline. So now we are looking to continue with more projects in the same area of Honduras.

We are currently working on two. First, we are returning to Los Sanchez to complete some smaller projects utilizing the water that they now have. Some options on the table are a tilapia farm (a source of food and income), an irrigation system (for farming), latrines and chimneys (currently cooking is done inside their huts, leaving soot on the walls and making the air hazardous to breathe). Second, we are going to another village, La Barranca, to complete a water distribution project that is somewhat similar to that which we completed in Los Sanchez. La Barranca had a water source until it was destroyed by Hurricane Mitch in 1998; since then they have been obtaining polluted water from a local farmer's cattle runoff. The big difference is that the source is not a freshwater spring but Rio Choluteca, a river with a reputation for its pollution. So this time around we must concern ourselves with the quality of the water which can be quite expensive. Since La Barranca (pop. 370) is only about two miles away from Orocuina Centro (pop. 4,500), the main city of the Orocuina region (pop. 20,000), we may be able to include Orocuina Centro in the distribution line. Due to problems with wells, Orocuina Centro currently has water only four hours a day, so this project would give them access to water 24/7!

In December we received approval from EWB-USA to continue our work in the program with these projects, and we have set a tentative goal to travel over our Spring Break (March 8-12) to assess the feasibility and details of both projects. So now, its paperwork and fundraising for the next two and a half months. We have a batch of new officers and members, and we're very excited to begin work on this project. We'll keep you posted on how everything's going!

Adam Dellinger
VP Membership

Thursday, February 5, 2009

EWB in the news!

The University of Toledo chapter of Engineers Without Borders has been awarded a $10,000 grant from the Toledo Rotary Foundation for support of a water supply project in Los Sanchez, Honduras.

WTOL-11 reports on the story

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SgzDNfY042Q

Water Project in Los Sanchez, Honduras

Hello EWB-UT Community!

Here is a quick update on the progress of our water-distribution system in Los Sanchez, Honduras.

EWB-UT has just completed the first trip of the implementation phase in January 2009 and is currently raising funds for the completion of the project.

CURRENT STUDENTS:

We need your help!  All majors are needed to fundraise and actively participate in the logistics and design in order to complete the water project.

Weekly meetings are held in the lobby of Nitschke Hall on Tuesday at 6 PM.  Just show up or email ewb.utoledo@gmail for information on how you can help.

ALUMNI AND FRIENDS:

As alumni you probably have received numerous phone calls asking for contributions to the university.  Donate to EWB and you will know exactly where your money is going!

DONATE TODAY!!
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http://utssl.utoledo.edu%2Futfoundation%2Fgift_engewb.asp

Thank you all for your continued support of EWB-UT and our shared mission of alleviating poverty worldwide through sustainable engineering projects!

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Max and Erma's Fundraiser

Please come help support The University of Toledo Engineers Without Borders
project in Honduras. Max and Erma's will donate 20% of all their sales to our
group. You just need to show up hungry and with our flyer (attached below)!