Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Giving What We Can - great example of charity in the UK

Here's a great example of someone being thoughtful about their personal approach to giving. The UK needs people to step up and make significant pledges like this!



Also, here's a great blog post on The Giving Movement: http://www.visualnews.com/2010/12/17/the-giving-movement

Monday, June 14, 2010

Clean water for India!

Many thanks to our friends who joined us in fasting for World Water Day 2010. ... Together, we changed thousands of lives. Thanks so much to JJ Starr for the awesome pics!!! ... Here are a few of the photos he brought back from our first completed water projects in India ...

A few happy girls near the project site ...


Here's the team that built the water well ...


And enjoying the new water system ...

Friday, March 19, 2010

The Water Imperative



Water is the most urgent need of the global poor.

In wealthy nations, we pour clean water from a faucet each morning. Not so for the global poor -- where nearly a billion people drink, cook and bathe with dirty water from infested swamps. This unsafe water causes disease and death, while also keeping women from work and children out of school.

On World Water Day this year -- March 22 -- we must take time out to remember the 4,500 children who die each day for a lack of access to clean, safe water.

In rural villages, children walk an average of 3.5 miles every day to fetch water from a smelly mudhole. Over 50% of the world’s hospital beds are filled with patients who suffer from water-borne illness.

If we drill a clean water well, the kids can go to school, and clinics are less crowded. Clean water access is the very first step -- a foundation for life, health, education and opportunity.

Since I began studying and living the grit of global poverty and economic development years ago, one burning question has consumed me: What is the most I can do as one person?

Of course government and business -- if directed properly -- could both help the global poor in a big way. Real leaders in these areas must pursue clear property rights and rule of law while promoting sustainable growth through trade and commerce.

But for those of us who are everyday citizens -- not currently elected leaders or multinational executives -- what is our best way to serve the poorest?

In the global poverty dialogue, there are policy experts who debate the merits of various interventions -- vitamins, food, medicine, infrastructure. Critics of water wells argue that some water projects fail, fall out of use, or are not sufficient in themselves.

Their critiques are important. We must develop ‘best practices’ from successful water projects (which are the vast majority). Further, we must create integrated solutions that create impact through a multi-faceted approach.

In a few years, we will see highly innovative rural projects that center on clean water access while transforming the entire village. Effective charities can build many other capacities around a water well -- training the community in well maintenance and repair, teaching hygiene and sanitation, and providing needed vitamins and medicine.

Among other big players, the Gates Foundation is investing heavily each year into building water and sanitation projects -- as well as discovering ways that the most effective solutions can be replicated on a global scale.

What’s incredible is that while Gates gives away a few billion dollars each year, the generosity of individual Americans is nearly 100 times larger -- some $230 billion in annual charity comes from all the ‘little guys’ rather than corporate or foundation grants.

What does this mean for us? Thoughtful public giving can change the world many times faster than the biggest headline donors. We are in fact ‘the change’ for the world -- and it is our duty to become informed global philanthropists.

It is up to us to change lives with clean water. For the price of lunch -- only $10 -- I can give one person access to clean water for a lifetime. If just one in ten Americans gave $150 to clean water, we could solve half of the most urgent crisis of the global poor -- giving clean water to 500 million people.

To create real global change, informed citizens must find excellent solutions and spread the word. Will you be the one in ten to change lives?

Water is the most urgent need of the global poor. In memory of the thousands who die each day from unsafe water, please seek out a great water charity, spread the word, and change lives today.


World Water Day is March 22. Rich Halvorson is a social entrepreneur and founder of GiveH2O, a coalition of high-efficiency charities that have given clean water to over 1 million people.

See our clean water coalition @ www.giveh2o.org

Monday, January 11, 2010

Fall Campaign Success!

This year's Fall Campaign really came together well. We had 225 people fast 1 meal a week for 12 weeks and give the money they would have spent out on food ($10) towards clean water projects that impact the most impoverished in the world. The original 225 people raised $27,000.00 that has funded 9 wells (see check). Congratulations Everyone!
And in order to reach our original goal of 30K, 77 people have agreed to do one more month, enabling us to fund our 10th well by the end of January! So proud of everyone involved and hope that your lives were enhanced by making tangible sacrifices each week for the good of those in need. So excited for what's in store and hope to create more smiles this year (like the one here at a Global Fast well in Liberia).

For more information on starting your own fasting team check out www.globalfast.org and www.generositywater.com