When Valerie Jenkinson heard about the devastation in the small Caribbean nation of Dominica after Hurricane Maria, she was not content to just make a donation. She started an organization that will make a much larger and lasting difference: Operators Without Borders.
Jenkinson knows the Caribbean area well since she spends about 6 month every year there conducting training as CEO of World Water and Wastewater Solutions Ltd. (Vancouver, British Columbia). “Over the years I have gotten to know a lot of people in the water industry in the Caribbean,” she said. She also attends water sector conferences in both Canada and the Caribbean.
Dominica’s water infrastructure decimated by Hurricane Maria
In September 2017, Hurricane Maria made landfall in Dominica. The category 5 storm decimated housing, infrastructure, and natural vegetation across the country. Jenkinson learned about the extent of the storm’s devastation as well as the country’s need for assistance during the Caribbean Water and Wastewater Association conference in Georgetown, Guyana.
Bernard Ettinoffe, general manager of Dominica Water and Sewerage Company Ltd. (Roseau), gave a keynote speech during the opening session at the conference. “He said, ‘we really need some help putting the systems back together,’” Jenkinson said. She met with Ettinoffe after the session and learned the devastation was so far-reaching that the country needed hands-on assistance and “boots on the ground” to get water and wastewater treatment services back up and running, she said.
Water sector steps up in time of need
Jenkinson began spreading the message at water sector events, starting at the Canadian Water and Wastewater Association conference. She quickly began receiving donations from individuals and organizations as well as offers from numerous volunteers to help. In December 2017, Jenkinson was able to send a team of three operators to help repair water and wastewater treatment systems in Dominica.
The first Operators Without Borders team included Marcel Misuraca and Jason Mank, members of the Water Environment Federation (Alexandria, Va.) and competitors on the Operations Challenge team, the OCWA Jets, and Glen Ketchum, an operator from Alberta, Canada. After working every day for 2 weeks, the team was able to help restore water services to three villages and get the main wastewater treatment facility back online. Their trip served as a pilot test for the new organization, Jenkinson said. Learn more about this trip in the December 2018 Water Environment & Technology article, “Operations Challenge heroes aid Caribbean hurricane recovery.”
Jenkinson has been astonished by the outpouring of support, both in financial assistance and offers from volunteers ready to help. She has 35 volunteers eager to get to work helping and could probably double that number with a few phone calls. “People in the water industry give probably more than anybody else I know,” Jenkinson said. “People are so generous, they love to help. … Operators want to do something and give their time.”
Training and mentoring program takes shape
Thankfully, no major storms hit the Caribbean this past hurricane season, Jenkinson said. So, as she works to register Operators Without Borders as a nonprofit in Canada, she is expanding the scope of the organization. “There are other needs down there,” Jenkinson said. After brainstorming with some colleagues, Jenkinson has decided to start sending volunteers to mentor and train operators working throughout the Caribbean.
Volunteers will work for 2 weeks alongside local crews in developing countries, learn their processes, assess their knowledge, and begin sharing information and tips to help local workers optimize processes, Jenkinson said. Two teams are scheduled to travel to Belize and Barbados in February.
New organization gets registered and expands
While current efforts are focused in the Caribbean, Jenkinson envisions Operators Without Borders to one day follow a similar model to Doctors Without Borders (New York) or Engineers Without Borders (Denver). She hopes to be able to send teams to any safe location where there is a need. “This is purely a volunteer effort to help our brothers and sisters in the industry,” Jenkinson said. “This is operators supporting operators.”
“In the water industry, we can affect the lives of so many people,” Jenkinson said. “When we go in and we work with these countries, we potentially are affecting the health and the well-being of the whole country.”
Funds limit the number of teams that can be sent on disaster recovery and training trips, Jenkinson said. It costs between $1000 and $1500 to send each volunteer on the missions. But she is working to spread the word to other potential donors and volunteers by giving presentations at industry events and during training sessions. In addition to filing paperwork registering the organization as a charity, Jenkinson has pulled together a Board of Directors, created bylaws for the organization, and is creating a website and database of potential volunteers.
Jenkinson always is looking for new volunteers, especially individuals with experience running desalination facilities as well as donors or partners. Those interested in contributing or learning more can contact her at jenkinsonv@gmail.com.
— Jennifer Fulcher, WEF Highlights
January 29, 2019
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