From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Church World Service Applauds Senate Passage of Water Bill


From "Lesley Crosson" <lcrosson@churchworldservice.org>
Date Fri, 02 Dec 2005 10:23:42 -0500

CHURCH WORLD SERVICE APPLAUDS SENATE PASSAGE OF WATER BILL
Says Clean Water Key to Fighting Disease, Poverty

NEW YORK - Dec. 2 - Global humanitarian agency Church World Service says
the recent U.S. Senate passage of the Paul Simon Water for the Poor Act
will bolster its ongoing efforts to decrease global poverty, sickness, and
death by increasing access to safe water for people in developing
countries.

A long-time advocate for universal access to safe and affordable drinking
water, Church World Service (CWS) applauded lawmakers for unanimously
passing a bill the agency says "demonstrates that the Congress of the
United States takes seriously the idea that access to water should be
contingent on need, not on the ability to pay."

CWS Executive Director and CEO Rev. John L. McCullough calls the legislative approval a "landmark" in that it recognizes the "availability of water
as a priority." The legislation, he says, "is consistent with CWS's
'"Water for All" grassroots advocacy campaign, which pinpoints universal
access to and availability of water as "critical to achieving the
Millennium Development Goals."
The campaign was endorsed by the CWS board of directors in October and by
the general assembly of CWS and the National Council of Churches USA in
November.

The Millennium Development Goals, agreed upon in September 2000 by nearly
200 heads of state, include reducing by half the number of people
worldwide without clean water and adequate sanitation by the year 2015.

Access to safe water --water that does not have to be boiled to rid it of
germs - is a daily issue of survival for people who cannot simply turn on
a tap to get water for drinking or bathing.

Twenty-one percent of children in developing countries have no source of
safe water within a fifteen-minute walk from their homes. What that means
for a school-age girl in Kenya is that she will spend hours walking miles
back and forth each day to fetch water for her family-often more hours
walking than she spends in a classroom.

CWS water projects have brought wells, pumps, latrines and education about
hygiene, conservation, and sustainability to people in some of the poorest
villages in the world.

The legislation is not a spending bill but it contains important authorizing language that CWS believes lays a strong foundation for congressional
spending on water projects.

"CWS supports community-based water systems and authentic democratic
participation of local communities in determining national water policies," says Rajyashri Waghray, the agency's director of education and advocacy.
U.S. funding for water in developing countries, she adds, "must be
consistent with those objectives."

As the legislation moves toward the funding stage, CWS continue focusing
attention on water through advocacy and project development.

The agency's efforts will have a global stage in February 2006 at the
General Assembly of the World Council of Churches (WCC) in Porto Alegre,
Brazil, where CWS will present "Water for All." Throughout the assembly,
CWS will showcase water projects it has undertaken in rural communities
around the world in a 'water tent' housing exhibits and demonstrations.

The WCC is expected to pass a resolution on water as a right, which will
further enhance CWS efforts, reports Waghray. "The Senate legislation
affirms that U.S. foreign assistance indeed should be used to improve the
lives and the health of poor people by promoting access to safe water."

As all those components converge, she adds, "We may be well on the way to
a time when all people, regardless of their income or location, have easy
access to a resource as important as water."

Church World Service is a relief, development, and refugee assistance
agency supported by Protestant, Orthodox, and Anglican denominations in
the U.S.

Media Contacts

Jan Dragin - 24/7 - (781) 925-1526, jdragin@gis.net
Lesley Crosson, (212) 870-2676, lcrosson@churchworldservice.org

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