Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Nov - Dec Vol. 9 No.6 | Page 14

NEWS in brief Global Highlights Water Wasters May Face Jail Time By Sara Jerome AfricaSan 4 update - new dates in May 2015 The 4th AfricaSan conference, scheduled to be held in Dakar, Senegal from 8 - 10 October 2014 has been postponed. AfricaSan, which is the foremost continental event on sanitation and hygiene, is scheduled to take place in May 2015. In a press statement issued by the Executive Secretary of the Secretariat of the African Ministers Council on Water (AMCOW), the decision to postpone the meeting is due to the major health challenge of the Ebola crisis. Image credit: “Sprinkler,” Chill Mimi When California water regulators authorized $500 fines for water wasting, the public marveled at how far the state was willing to go to face down the drought.But one city is going beyond that. In Shasta Lake, water wasters can now be punished with jail time, according to a report. Water use violations “are considered a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of up to $1,000, imprisonment for a period of up to 30 days, or a combination of both. The city may also install a flow restrictor on the customer’s service or shut off water service,” KRCR News reported. Restrictions include that “use of landscape irrigation systems is limited to three nights per week only between the hours of 9:00 PM to 6:00 AM” and that “water from landscape irrigation shall not run off to adjoining property or to a roadside ditch or gutter,” among other rules, according to the city. AMCOW, in consultation with the Government of Senegal considered the need to take proactive actions aimed at reducing the chances of the continued spread of Ebola, and the travel ban which certain countries have placed on some of the worst affected West African countries. AMCOW Executive Secretary, Bai Mass Tall announced, “we took this decision out of a sense of responsibility that we do not inadvertently create an environment that has potentials to continue the Ebola spread. We also want to ensure that no country is left out from participating in this important conference which we need to convene to discuss how to make sanitation for all a reality in Africa as we march beyond 2015.” WSSCC is a supporting partner and co-convener of AfricaSan along with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the European Commission and other development partners. AfDB and Didier Drogba Foundation team up to tackle Ebola crisis The city is trying to offer some assistance with conservation. “The city has indoor and outdoor water conservation kits available to all city customers. The indoor kit includes a low-flow shower head, faucet aerators, pipe tape, a toilet tank bank and leak detection dye tablets. The outdoor kits include a 7-spray hose nozzle, hose timer, moisture meter, ran and sprinkler gauge and garden hose repair kit,” the news report said. The crackdown on water wasters is a statewide affair. A measure approved by the State Water Resources Control Board in July imposed “new restrictions on outdoor water use starting Aug. 1 that could result in fines of up to $500 per violation,” the San Jose Mercury News reported. For more on policy and politics, check out Water Online’s Regulations & Legislation Solution Center. Source: Water Online 12 Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene • November - December 2014 African Development Bank Group President Donald Kaberuka met with Didier Drogba, Ivorian footballer and humanitarian, at the AfDB headquarters in Abidjan on Friday, November 14 to discuss ways to tackle the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. In their private meeting, Kaberuka and Drogba discussed a partnership between the AfDB and the Didier Drogba Foundation in an effort to respond to Ebola, a health crisis that according to the World Health Organization has infected more than 14,098 people since March 2014, resulting in 5,160 deaths.