Studies undertaken in South Africa have found that social franchising partnerships for the routine maintenance of infrastructure could alleviate and address many challenges in the management of water services. A three-year pilot project has drawn to a successful conclusion. This provided selected infrastructure maintenance services to approximately 400 schools in the Butterworth education district in the Eastern Cape province. Half a dozen franchisee microbusinesses were created, and of the order of three dozen previously unemployed people were taught workplace skills. Irish Aid funded the concept development, but the franchisees were paid from the normal schools operation and maintenance budgets. Despite difficulties arising directly from provincial education department inefficiencies, the pilot project has proven the value of social franchising partnerships for this kind of work – the department now has a model it can roll out to the rest of the more than 4,000 rural schools across the Eastern Cape. Many opportunities lie in applying the same approach to other operation and/or maintenance activities within the water and sanitation services delivery chain. The time is ripe to further develop the concept so that it can move up the technology ladder, expanding its range of competencies beyond its current tried and tested boundaries.
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Research Article|
May 06 2013
Social franchising principles do work: the business approach to removal and disposal of faecal sludge – from pilot to scale
K. Wall;
1CSIR, PO Box 395, Pretoria 0001, South Africa
E-mail: [email protected]
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O. Ive;
O. Ive
2Amanz' abantu Services, PO Box 19442, Tecoma 5214, South Africa
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J. Bhagwan;
J. Bhagwan
3Water Research Commission (WRC), Private Bag X03, Gezina 0031, South Africa
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F. Kirwan
F. Kirwan
4Irish Aid, Dublin, Ireland
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Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development (2013) 3 (3): 451–458.
Article history
Received:
January 03 2012
Accepted:
March 28 2013
Citation
K. Wall, O. Ive, J. Bhagwan, F. Kirwan; Social franchising principles do work: the business approach to removal and disposal of faecal sludge – from pilot to scale. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development 1 September 2013; 3 (3): 451–458. doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/washdev.2013.007
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