Our previous article, below, gave the background to how SSS became involved with, and is fronting, the renovation of the largest Lower Basic (primary) school – Sukuta – in The Gambia. This blog focuses on what the plans are, and what we hope to deliver within eighteen months.
Based on discussions with the school leadership and the regional director of education, we drew up a list of the priorities that would renovate the school and make it fit for the 2020s. These are:
We will double the school's water storage capacity via solar-power
There is no piped water at the school. The supply comes from a well, it is too small. We will double its capacity.
There is currently only one standpipe in the school, to serve 2,000 children. We will be increase this to eight, placing them near toilets, food serving areas and the new sick room
We will completely rebuild the unhealthy and unsafe toilet blocks
Our funding proposals to date, will pay for all of the above
There are, however, two outstanding elements of the nine-part project for which funding has yet to be identified. We will seek the money this over the next few months, so that all aspects of the project can be completed in one construction exercise. The unfunded elements are:
All of our proposals have been put to the Ministry of Basic and Secondary Education, the school’s governors and its PTA, and they have been enthusiastically endorsed. The food vendors have been consulted and are delighted by them and will be involved in their design and layout of their new area.
Getting the band back together
Having defined the scope of the project, we obtained quotes from the construction company- Future in Our Hands - that we have worked with successfully in a variety of building projects in Sohm. It began as a Swedish NGO dedicated to training Gambian people in construction skills. It has gradually emerged to become a building company, jointly Swedish and Gambian managed, that operates almost exclusively in the not-for-profit sector, with an on-going commitment to train local labour in building skills.
In all of our dealings with them, to date, they have provided a high standard of work, to spec, on time and on budget.
We are confident that working with Lamin Saidy, the former deputy head at Sohm and now at Sukuta and the construction company that delivered in Sohm that we will be getting the band back together to deliver the renovation of The Gambia’s largest primary school, over the next eighteen months.
The third article of this three-parter on Sukuta, to appear in two weeks, will explain how we have managed to fund this major and exciting project.
No comments:
Post a Comment