Solid Waste Management Made Easy (By DENR and ESWM Fieldbook)
Solid Waste Management Made Easy (By DENR and ESWM Fieldbook)
Solid Waste Management Made Easy (By DENR and ESWM Fieldbook)
The publication of this fieldbook is part of the CommunityBased Ecological Solid Waste Management Programme of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), with funding assistance from the Government of Japan. The Programme is implemented through the National Solid Waste Management Commission (NSWMC), and supported by the Environmental Management Bureau, an attached agency of the DENR mandated to restore, protect, and enhance environmental quality in the country. The Programme aims to serve as a catalyst for the implementation of Republic Act No. 9003 (the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act) by providing a bottom-up approach to ecological solid waste management from which best practices could be derived for replication.
Contents
Messages ............................................................... 2 Overview .............................................................. 4 Module 1: How to conduct a solid waste management community planning workshop ...................... 5 Module 2: Vision-Mission-Goals Formulation......................8 Module 3: Strategy and program planning......................10 Module 4: Participatory solid waste situation assessment and issue analysis..................................................13 Module 5: Guide to street consultations on solid waste situation assessment and issue analysis....... 17 Module 6: How to conduct participatory profiling and solid waste situation assessment ...................22 Module 7: Stakeholders analysis......................................... 24 Module 8: How to design a solid waste management advocacy plan of action ............................... 26 Module 9: Trainors orientation ......................................... 32 Module 10: Perception survey enumerators training.. 37 Annex: Guide to Area Profiling...................................... 39
Message
The country should be safeguarded against problems brought about by environmental degradation. For years, Filipinos have fallen short of the discipline to preserve and protect the environment. The focus on economic growth has led us to take environmental management for granted. Solid waste became the most visible environmental problem in the country, and has remained so for years. In 2000, an estimated 10.67 million tons of garbage were generated and distributed across regions, with a majority of the waste coming from Metro Manila. Garbage has filled the metropolis, with every Filipino producing an estimated half a kilo of waste per day. Worse, this generation rate is expected to double by 2010 if left unabated. Recognizing the need to address this environmental and social menace, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources has prioritized proper solid waste management in its 12-point agenda. The agenda includes implementing the proper closure and rehabilitation of dumpsites nationwide; developing sanitary landfills and safe disposal systems; promoting recycling and waste recovery; and providing guidance and technical assistance in waste management strategies and options to all local government units, through the National Solid Waste Management Commission. It is a privilege for the Department to have partners in each sector of society the private sector, the academe, non-government organizations, religious organizations, civic groups, and the international development community. This fieldbook, Ecological Solid Waste Management Made Easy, a simplified, step-by-step guide in implementing solid waste management in homes and communities, is a fruit of the collaboration of these sectors. It is made possible through the generosity of the United Nations Development Programme, through its Community-Based Ecological Solid Waste Management Programme in the Philippines. May this fieldbook serve as your quick reference to proper solid waste management. Together, let us do more than care; let us all help save the environment, for us today, and for the future generations of Filipinos.
SECRETARY ANGELO T. REYES Secretary, DENR and Chairman, National Solid Waste Management Commission
Message
PROTECTING our environment and natural resources from the hazards caused by improper municipal solid waste management has been a continuing struggle for every Filipino. We are both victim and culprit to the countrys garbage problem and, regardless of our stature in society, we all must take part and do our share. The enactment of Republic Act No. 9003, or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act, paved the way for a shift from indiscriminate waste disposal to institutionalized proper solid waste management at every household and community. By requiring the segregation of solid waste at source, the law educates every son and daughter the basics of proper environmental management in the hope that, as they grow older, the environmental consciousness may be brought into their school, business, and place of work. Compliance with other environmental standards on wastewater, air emissions, medical and hazardous wastes would no longer be difficult to comprehend and can easily be made part of the day-to-day practice of every business and industry in the country. The law does not stop there. Waste minimization is attained through cash from trash and material recovery programs that broke recyclables from a monopoly of junkshops to a resource opportunity for each household or community. Open dumpsites are being closed and rehabilitated. Local government units, by themselves or in clusters, are building engineered landfills or are availing of technologies to manage their residual wastes. Through its Community-Based Ecological Solid Waste Management Programme in the Philippines, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has become a key partner of the National Solid Waste Management Commission (NSWMC) and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR). Ten pilot areas in Metro Manila were set up and now serve as models on segregation-at-source and material recovery systems for other communities in the Philippines to follow. We hope you could make full use of this fieldbook, Ecological Solid Waste Management Made Easy. This fieldbook will provide every home, office, and local government unit a do-it-yourself guide to implementing ecological solid waste management in our communities.
Overview
IF you happen to pick up a copy and start reading this fieldbook, you are
about to take the next step to making solid waste management a way of life. This fieldbook is intended for those who have already read the handbook, Solid Waste Management Made Easy: A Do-It-Yourself Guide to a Communitybased Ecological Solid Wastement Management Programme. This companion fieldbook is intended for those who are seriously determined to follow the letter of the law (Republic Act 9003, the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000) and are in a position to carry out changes in the community. This fieldbook contains ten training modules on running your own ecological solid waste management program. Solid waste management is not just the responsibility of the government or our top local leaders. We are all in a position to make a difference starting in our own households, in our barangays, in our communities in general. By implementing these training workshops, we could be making the first step in saving, not just the environment, but a lot of peoples lives in our community as well. We invite you to read this fieldbook and cascade the workshop lessons with the other members of the community.
Articulate the various strategies, programs, structures and mechanisms needed to reach desired vision and accomplish identified mission and goals; Identify and define the roles of the various stakeholders.
V. DURATION
Eight hours
V. PARTICIPANTS
Expected participants are the following: members of the Barangay Council Solid Waste Management Committee Sangguniang Kabataan expanded Core Group members key leaders of NGOs barangay-based associations street, block or cluster leaders LGU and government line agency representatives Ideally all streets, clusters or blocks in the community should be represented in the workshop.
VI. METHODOLOGY
Learning will be facilitated with the use of vartious training methodologies such as: Presentation using audio-visual aids Small Group Discussion and Presentation/Plenary Sessions Workshop method Structured learning experiences (SLE) or group dynamics
VII. CONTENT OUTLINE Part 1: The Community Solid Waste Management Scenario
The Waste Management Situation A. State of Waste Management in the Barangay (from the point of view of participants) B. Results of the Perception Survey C. Secondary Information
Solid Waste Management Issue identification and Analysis (Workshop Group Problem Tree Analysis) A. Cause and Effect B. Contributing Factors
Part 4: Who Are The Major Stakeholders and Their Role in The Plan
Main Goal
Vision
Purpose
Mission
Results
Results
Results
Results
Results
Results
The Problems Situation will now be the single desired scenario the vision (or strategic goal for SWM). The Causes will now be what the community will do, how to go about attaining the vision and goals the mission. The Contributing Factors will now be the concrete verifiable changes desired the specific goals (objectives).
For GOALS
Let them list the opposites of the contributory factors of the problem tree. Rephrase them into concrete desired and verifiable changes in the community. The facilitator, with help from the participants, will classify related goals into clusters, if needed.
Synthesis
VISION
Short input on the vision: something aspired for, not necessarily realizable during ones lifetime nor in a project timelife: a bigger picture of what we want; realizable not by a single mission or programs, but a combination of more than one.
GOALS
Summary and input: goals are the concrete and verifiable manifestations of the vision we aspire for. This is the basis of the concrete initiative of the people concerned.
MISSION
Facilitator refers back to the problem/issue. How exactly the barangay will attain the vision, what they have to do.
Given to:
Its purpose is to: KNOW HOW THEY AFFECT OTHERS AND HOW THEY ARE PERCEIVED
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GOALS
1. Self-awareness 2. Improvement of relationship 3. Personal growth
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GUIDE QUESTIONS
Reporting/Synthesis Processing (45 mins.) Each group will be given 10 minutes to report. The facilitator could ask for clarifications, comments, suggestions and finally, consensus on the acceptance for each of the group output. After all the strategies have been completed, the Facilitator could summarize the strategies and the corresponding operational targets.
What programs or major activities can be done under this strategy? (Anong programa ang gustong gawin sa balaking ito?) For each of the program or major activity, what are the specific activities/steps on how to do this? (Ano ang mga detalye ng programa o mga hakbangin?) How, who and for whom do we do the specific activities/steps? (Paano, sino, o para kanino ang mga gawain?) When do we target accomplishments or implementation of each of these? (Kailan ang takdang panahon ng pagsasagawa ng mga ito?) What are the requirements to do these? (Ano ang mga kailangan upang magawa ang mga gawain?)
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The facilitator could ask the following questions: 1. Can you still think of other strategies and programs needed to address the solid waste management concerns of the Barangay? 2. With these strategies and programs, have you provided an intervention for the various causes and contributory factors identified earlier? 3. Do you think that if all the target tasks are done, we can make a difference in your community? Summary Statement 1. What we have done just now is put details into the mission statement you made in the earlier workshop. Together, these strategies, programs and mechanisms will contribute to the realization of the goals the group has set. This gives us a clear picture of the means towards which we can put our acts together as a community and work towards a common vision of a clean and progressive community. 2. As you can see, there is no one answer to the solid waste management problems of the barangay. You have set various interventions that respond to the types and causes of the problems. You have prepared here an integrated approach for solving the identified problems. 3. We will be setting the immediate tasks so that the plan drafted today can be refined and prepared for presentation to the Barangay Council and the community through the Barangay Solid Waste Management Committee (Action Planning).
I. OBJECTIVES:
Participants are able to describe and analyze the solid waste situation in their communities and relate this to environmental, social, economic and political aspects of their community. Solid waste management needs of the community are identified; Identify and prioritize issues and concerns requiring interventions and solutions; Trace the causes of the identified issues and concerns; Identify the other contributing factors to the current waste situation; Validation of Perception survey results and other barangay, city, regional and national data; and To increase the awareness of the participants about their communitys solid waste situation.
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Group output will be presented through drawings and supplemented by the following matrix: Issues and Problems Examples: Hindi maayos ang koleksiyon ng basura kung kayat marami ang di nakokolekta. Walang ginagawa ang mga opisyales upang malutas ang problema. Maraming maling gawi ang mga tao sa pagtatapon ng basura. Maruming paligid ng komunidad ang nagdudulot ng sakit at maraming langaw. Concrete Manifestations Examples: Maraming basura ang natatambak sa collection points Causes or Contributory
Examples: Walang malinaw na plano upang pagtuunan ang tamang pagkolekta ng Walang nangongolekta basura di madaanan ang mga Walang tukoy na tao kalye. upang pamahalaan ang basura. Mga nagtatapon ng Walang malinaw na batas o di mahigpit na pagpapatupad ng mga batas. Walang disiplina at pakialam ang mga tao Di alam kung paano ang paghihiwalay ng basura
basura sa ilog di hinuhuli walang ordinansa ukol sa pagtatapon ng basura May mga sirang muwebles sa bangketa Kalyeng ginagamit na labahan, tindahan, kulungan ng hayop mapanghing eskinita/pagihi maski saan.
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Major categories: Economic, political,sociocultural and environmental Tae ng hayop o tao sa reasons. daanan Mapanghing eskinita/ pag-ihi maski saan Mga basura sa estero o kanal Tirang pagkain na maski saan itinapon Each group will be provided the idea cards/manila paper to write down their synthesis or drawing as a group. During the plenary, the group output will be presented by the reporter for five minutes per group only.
GUIDE QUESTIONS
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Contributing Factors
Contributing Factors
Contributing Factors
Contributing Factors
The problem tree is a visual way of understanding the relationships among problems faced by a community. It enables the community to identify key problems. Debate the cause-effect relationships among them. Establish a hierarchy of problems. Construct a tree which will clarify the relationship visually. The tree, at one glance, can enable people to identify and prioritize problems together.
Module 5 Guide to STREET CONSULTATIONS ON SOLID WASTE SITUATION ASSESSMENT & ISSUE ANALYSIS
I. METHODOLOGY
Focused Group Discussion
II. PARTICIPANTS
Household representative per cluster, group or street Discussion per group will be guided by a facilitator or a core group member. Assign a recorder or secretary. Discussion will revolve around the solid waste situation of the particular cluster or street. Issues and problems will be identified. Concrete manifestations of the problems to be enumerated. Causes of these issues and problems to be analyzed. Solutions to be proposed.
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GUIDE QUESTIONS
Group output can be written in the following matrix: Issues and Problems Concrete Manifestations of the Problems Causes or Contributory Proposed Solution
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Examples: Examples: Hindi maayos ang Maraming basura koleksiyon ng basura ang natatambak sa kung kayat marami collection points ang di nakokolekta. Walang nangongolekta di Walang ginagawa madaanan ang mga ang mga opisyales kalye. upang malutas ang Mga nagtatapon problema. ng basura sa ilog di Maraming maling hinuhuli walang gawi ang mga tao sa ordinansa ukol sa pagtatapon ng basura pagtatapon ng basura. May mga sirang muwebles sa Maruming paligid bangketa ng komunidad ang Kalyeng nagdudulot ng sakit ginagamit na labahan, at maraming langaw. tindahan, kulungan ng hayop mapanghing eskinita/pag-ihi maski saan. Mapanghing eskinita/pag-ihi maski saan Tae ng hayop o tao sa daanan Mga basura sa estero o kanal Tirang pagkain na maski saan itinapon
Examples: Walang malinaw na plano upang pagtuunan ang tamang pagkolekta ng basura. Walang tukoy na tao upang pamahalaan ang basura. Walang malinaw na batas o di mahigpit na pagpapatupad ng mga batas. Walang disiplina at pakialam ang mga tao Di alam kung paano ang paghihiwalay ng basura Major categories: Economic, political,sociocultural and environmental reasons.
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COs should remember that core members should be carefully selected because of their potential to become local organizer later on. Once the core group members have been chosen and confirmed by their neighborhood, conduct an orientation meeting and discuss the following: Why the core group must be formed What are the functions of the core group Why they were identified as potential members What their position and commitment are to this challenge
Know their position and commitment are to this challenge Know their training needs to enhance their potential/ capabilities Initial plan of action and schedule activities The formation of the core group wraps up the activities for the social preparation phase.
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V. COMMUNITY INTEGRATION
The credibility of a Community Organizer (CO) will depend on how he/she will carry himself/herself in integrating with people. As an outsider, the CO should be able to identify himself/herself with the community by keeping a low profile and maintaining a simple lifestyle. Stress the community-based program approach by inspiring them to collectively act in demanding for and managing the project. On the other hand, COs should not raise high expectations nor give promises that cannot be met by the program. This can affect the credibility of the program/project. Some of the methods to be used in integrating with the community: Small group discussion Community meetings Dyads interaction Participation in social and economic activities Informal discussion with the groups/sectors
The following pointers for community integration should be considered: Be one of them. Try to dress, talk and act as community residents do. Establish good interpersonal relationships. Dont antagonize the people. Keep a low profile. Be humble. Be sensitive on how your presence affects the community and the people you deal with. Be sociable and friendly. Be punctual and keep appointments. Be respectable. Avoid excessive drinking and gambling which might damage your professional credibility.
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Module 6 How to conduct PARTICIPATORY COMMUNITY PROFILING AND SOLID WASTE SITUATION ASSESSMENT
I. OBJECTIVES
To identify solid waste management and related issues per street, their implications, and how the participants can address them. To actively involve stakeholders in the information gathering process and establish a common information base for all the participants. To increase the awareness of participants about their communitys solid waste situation.
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Individual Worksheets will be collected for the PMOs reference. Plenary Session for reporting Outputs (1 hour and 15 mins.) Each group will report. (5 mins. per group) While this is ongoing, the co-facilitator will write down problems on the attached matrix to evaluate the weight of each issue/ problem and to identify the cause and effect of these issues. The same issue will be written on idea cards, one idea per card. Solid Waste-Related Issues and Problems of Community Problem Tree format (1 hour) Facilitator will ask participants: Does problem A cause Problem A? Does Problem A cause Problem B? If the answer is yes, the box corresponding to the identified pair will be marked with an X. Horizontal marks will be totaled as well as vertical marks. The issue/problem with the highest total horizontally is the major problem. The issue/problem with the highest total vertical marks is the major cause. D. Situating the Community In Metro Manila, in relation with the other project sites LGU Solid Waste Basic Statistics Secondary Community Data Presentation and Validation on (Map, No. of Streets, No. of Households, Population) E. Identifying Possible Solutions to the SWM-related Problems of the Community Workshop Objective Tree Format Referring to the Problem Tree, the facilitator will ask the group what changes they would like to see. These refer to the results in the Objective Tree. The facilitator would then ask the group ways of bringing these changes. These refer to the activities in the Tree. F. Evaluating and Affirming Results of the Workshop Using the Objective, Reflective, Interpretive, Decisional (ORID) method, the participants will evaluate and affirm their outputs. Participants will be asked to sign their names on the manila paper where the Objective Tree is written.
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Module 7
Stakeholders Analysis
(for Identifying Stakeholders and their Role in the Project)
I. OBJECTIVES:
Stakeholders of the proposed plan are: Identified; Their interests made known; and Their roles in the success or failure of the project defined and clarified.
II. METHODOLOGY:
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Brief input on what stakeholders are. Small Group Workshop (15 minutes) The same groupings will be utilized. Considering the earlier discussions of the group and the just-completed solution tree, the group will discuss the following guide questions: Identify all the stakeholders involved in the just-completed plan, classifying if primary, secondary and key stakeholders (who). For each stakeholder, specify their interests (why). Define their potential role or responsibilities in the project (what). Answers will be written on idea cards: 1 idea = 1 card. Synthesis/ Processing (15 minutes) During plenary, the Facilitator, using prepared matrix on manila paper, gets answers on the above questions to fill up the Stakeholders Matrix. The facilitator will go directly to get consensus on the following: Who and what type of stakeholder Why the stakeholder What is his/her role in the project While this is going on, the co-facilitator posts the idea cards on the prepared matrix.
DEFINITIONS STAKEHOLDERS
Persons, groups or organizations with interests in a given action. This action can be a project or a program. They can be further differentiated into primary, secondary and key stakeholders.
PRIMARY STAKEHOLDERS
They are the direct impact recipients either as beneficiaries or as those who will bear the costs or negative impacts.
SECONDARY STAKEHOLDERS
They are the mediators of the process, and are usually, externally based.
KEY STAKEHOLDERS
They are the primary or secondary stakeholders whose involvement is significant for the success of the action.
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OBJECTIVE OF STAKEHOLDERSANALYSIS
As a planning tool, Stakeholders Analysis is used to get a better picture so planners can concentrate on strategies that will build on existing alliances and device mechanisms to deal with existing hostilities. Stakeholders Analysis help make various stakeholders aware of the need to cooperate and work together.
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Examples: Policy and decision-makers important to be reached as these are the people who will craft the laws and ordinances that are the bases for solid waste and environmental programs. Schools have important role in promoting environmentalism (SWM principles) especially through the integration of environmental and SWM concepts in the school curricula. Media organizations social influence, promotes environmentalism and SWM consciousness. Youth organizations most active group in promoting environmental concerns, operating on the principle of peer pressure; need to have access to environmental and SWM knowledge. General public a recipient, not only of any specific campaign directed to the general public, but also of campaigns directed to specific audience target.
Time boundedness. One must be able to achieve the objective within a specific period of time. Observability. One must be able to observe what one intends to accomplish. Measurability. One must be able to measure what it is that one wants to achieve. Achievability. The objective must be achievable. Simplicity. The objective would be clearer if it is simply stated. Another way of stating objective is by considering the following ABCD of Environmental Advocacy Objectives: Audience: Who are your audience? Behavior: What do you want your audience to demonstrate? Condition: When do you want to begin observing this behavior in your audience and under what conditions? Degree: To what extent or degree is your audience able to demonstrate what are expected of them? Example: By December 31, 2002, all drivers of passenger jeepneys plying the Calamba-Los Baos route shall have installed a covered plastic garbage container in their respective vehicles.
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To achieve this, one will have to design your messages according to communication campaign principles and techniques. The following techniques in message design may be employed: Emotional vs. rational appeals Emotional appeals stimulate human emotions, while rational appeals build strong arguments based on logic and supporting evidence for claims being made. Positive vs. negative appeals Negative appeals are also a form of emotional appeal, but they are threatening. They suggest unfavorable consequences resulting from non-compliance with the suggested practice. There is enough evidence in the literature indicating that people tend to ignore potential threats for as long as they can. It takes quite a substantial amount of threatening evidence to get people to take negative appeals seriously.
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Humorous vs. serious appeals Use humor to increase the effectiveness of the communication message, but make sure this is consistent with the message a rule of thumb on the channels and mass media channels. Mass vs. individual appeals Mass appeal builds on the strength of social pressure on an individual. In effect, what we are saying is, Everybody is doing it, so why are you not doing the same thing? So mass appeal is appropriate when the adoption of an idea or practice needs social approval. On the other hand, if the idea or practice is personal, then the individual appeal approach is more appropriate. One-sided vs. two-sided arguments One-sided arguments have been found to be more effective with people who have initially agreed with a favorable point of view expressed in the communication message. Two-sided arguments have been found to be more effective with those who are initially opposed to the viewpoint expressed in the message. Research has found that better-educated people tend to be influenced by twosided arguments, while less educated people are influenced by one-sided arguments.
Definite conclusions vs. open conclusion If your target audiences are intelligent, then the open conclusion approach may be more appropriate because they may be able to draw conclusions themselves. On the other hand, if you are sure that your audience is not intelligent, then you employ the definite conclusion approach to make sure that they will not miss the point. Repetitive vs. one-time appeals Research on the effects of repetition indicate that repetition increases the amount of information the audience can remember. However, after three or four repetitions, any additional information that can be remembered would be less significant and therefore, less useful. If the repetition is too frequent and there is no corresponding reward, then there is likelihood of loss of attention. In addition, repetition can have a negative effect if the message is weak or perceived to be offensive. As a general rule, therefore, increase the interval of repetition each time you give the message (e.g., twice a day or two days, then once daily for a couple of days, then twice a week for a week, then once a week for a month, then perhaps twice a month for a couple of months) until you decide to discontinue.
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The effectiveness and efficiency of use of various media channels depend largely on the nature and purpose of the communication, as well as the target audience. Various media channels can reach multiple audience segments, but it must be kept in mind that there will be one or perhaps a couple of media that are appropriate only for a specific audience group. Other media would be supportive.
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General Public
MEDIA GROUPING
TARGET AUDIENCE
In planning the monitoring and evaluation system, one can ask the following questions: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. What do you want to achieve? What do you accept as evidence of your success? What information do you need to produce this evidence? What are your sources of information? How are you going to collect the data/information? What tools or instruments are you going to use to collect and analyze the data? 7. Who will collect the data for you? 8. Who will use the information you have obtained?
VIII.
A budget is a plan of action expressed in financial terms. An effective way of presenting budget requirements for advocacy campaigns is to list down all the specific activities and cost them out. It is necessary to know how much it will take to perform a particular activity. To be able to present the budget in an appropriate format, one needs to prepare as well a work plan: a Gantt chart showing the various activities and the relative time frame within which to undertake these activities. For each activity, theres a need to show the specific items and their respective cost. Cost includes personal services, supplies, travel requirements, equipment rentals, and forth.
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Module 9 TRAINORS ORIENTATION Training on Proper Waste Management at the Household Level
I. RATIONALE
Republic Act 9003 calls for segregation at source. Thus, proper waste management should be taught at the household level for the successful implementation of this Act. Given the huge number of households in any barangay, it is necessary to train prime movers from the barangay and equip them with the proper knowledge and skills on ecological solid waste management so they can share these with other members of their community.
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IV. PARTICIPANTS
Expected participants are active members and officers of community-based organizations that are pursuing environment-related projects in their barangay.
V. METHODOLOGY
Training will be facilitated using various training methodologies such as: Lecture with interactive discussion Structured learning experiences Exhibit of the different types of solid wastes from households Hands-on demonstration
Preliminaries
The host Community Organizer (CO) leads/asks a participant to lead an invocation. The host CO calls on the Barangay Chairman or Kagawad-in-Charge to give welcome remarks. The host CO facilitates a getting-to-know-you activity. The host CO presents the objectives of the Trainors Training.
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The trainer discusses the types of solid waste generated at the household level and their proper handling, emphasizing that the basis for this is Republic Act 9003 as well as the Unified Approach to SWM. Compostables are primarily kitchen waste. Recyclables are consumer items that can still be converted into suitable/beneficial use or can be re-processed/recycled. Residual waste are those that cannot be composted, reused nor recycled. Bulky waste are items that cannot be placed in containers (i.e., worn-out furniture) because of their size. The trainer emphasizes the following points: Recyclables should be clean and dry. Recyclables should be free from contaminants.
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Residual wastes should be packed properly. Kitchen waste/Compostables should be strained/drained. There would be a special collection day for bulky waste. The trainer then focuses on the Types of Recyclables. The trainer explains that because of technological advances, more and more composite materials are being developed from the types of paper to plastic and states that: The basic units of plastics are ethylene and vinyl. Ethylenes are softer than vinyl. The sando bag is polyethylene plastic. Thus, it is the softest. They are, however, non-recyclables because they are usually contaminated when used the same with paper. The trainer then takes out different types of plastic, paper, glass and other recyclable wastes. He/she instructs the participants to look for the numbers of the bottles at the bottom part.
Importance of recycling: Resource conservation Recycling and the role of segregation in sustaining the process Segregation: Transforming waste into a resource
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OPEN FORUM
Estimated Time/Duration: 15 minutes The trainer asks for any clarificatory questions and answers them. If there are none, the trainer closes the session.
it is difficult to find vacant lots for the purpose. It is, therefore, important that households do their share in processing compostables when they can.
SYNTHESIS
The trainer closes the session by sharing the benefits of composting and applying compost to the soil.
EVALUATION
The trainer will distribute the evaluation forms and ask each participant to fill one out. The trainer then collects them back for reference. The trainer closes with these statements: What we are doing is not easy because we are dealing with peoples attitudes and practices which were acquired through time. So changing them will also require time and practice which should start from us in this room.
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I. RATIONALE
The success of any survey activity rests a lot on how enumerators administer the questionnaires. No matter how good the questions are, if the enumerators do not ask the questions effectively, good results cannot come out from the activity. Thus, enumerators need to be trained and briefed thoroughly on the various factors and probable situations they may encounter in the field.
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IV. PARTICIPANTS
Expected participants are the core group members and identified volunteers from each of the project pilot sites. A minimum of nine core group members and/or volunteers are targeted for the workshop.
V. METHODOLOGY
Learning will be facilitated with the use of various training methodologies, such as: Input/lecture with interactive discussion and visual aids Discussion method with use of Idea Cards Role Playing/Simulation Workshop Method Facilitator prepares at least five scenarios for interview. Each participant will be given a maximum of 15 minutes to conduct an interview of the facilitator, who will use a different scenario for each. While one participant is conducting interview, the rest should observe and take note of the way interview was done, how the interviewer managed the answers. Take note of the strengths and weaknesses of each interview process. The facilitator then processes the activity: identify the strengths, weaknesses, and summarize these into DOs and the DONTs. At the plenary, the facilitators present the output of the group for a common guidelines (DOs and DONTs). Action Planning using the following matrix: Street/Sitio Boundary No. of Respondents Interval Assigned Persons
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Annex
SOURCES OF DATA
REMARKS
NSO data Barangay/LGU data especially from health center Foot survey results
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Topographic map Barangay map and street map LGU Map/Locational Map NAMRIA Barangay office or LGU Municipality or City Planning Office Landuse map DPWH Ocular visit Photo documentation
DATA/INFORMATION NEEDED
Number, sizes, types and general description of streets/roads Socio-economic, Cultural and Political Environment Livelihood and income Livelihood and income sources lncome levels of population Commerce and industries types, contribution to the economy of the barangay Transportation and communication Health and education description of the health and education facilities by type, number and spatial distribution; morbidity and mortality rates caused by diseases Political Political units and boundaries Citizen participation Local legislation on environment and natural resources Cooperatives and NGOs discussion of the activities
SOURCES OF DATA
REMARKS
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NSO data Barangay/City data Barangay/City officials Ocular visit Health Center Education Boards Ocular visit Schools List of NGOs and cooperatives Officials and members of cooperatives and NGOs
DATA/INFORMATION NEEDED
Solid Waste Management System and/or Condition Description of the sewerage and waste discharge system as to type, number and location Solid waste management structure Barangay Solid Waste Management Committee Street Sweepers Collectors Junkshops LGU/Barangay Regulations/Ordinances Storage System: Household/Communal/ Community/what are used in sidewalks Type of garbage: segregated or mixed garbage Collection System: frequency, who collects (LGU, Barangay, Informal, etc.), what type of equipment used Assessment of cleanliness of streets Past and current SWM programs or projects Other relevant data or information
SOURCES OF DATA
REMARKS
Barangay officials Solid Waste Management group: street sweepers, collectors, junkshop owners Use of monitoring tool for cleanliness
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