Water in Haiti: The Solution
Our chlorinators provide reliable water protection. Tablet chlorinators provide a steady, preset level of chlorination persists in the water for many days. This provides dependable protection against the disease-causing bacteria common in the buckets, home storage tanks, and local piping in poor communities.
Chlorination is safe and easy to maintain, and no electricity is needed. Unlike gas and liquid chlorine, which are dangerous and unstable, our chlorine tablets are stable enough to store in difficult conditions and safe enough to be handled by amateurs. The chlorinators operate on the water's own gravity flow, so no additional equipment is necessary.
Our system looks toward sustainability for future years. We seek to encourage local "ownership" of each water system and teach local people the skills needed to sustain the chlorine system in future years. Local water boards are trained by small, International Action Staff to adjust chlorine levels, make minor repairs, and educate their neighbors about the value of clean water.
Our staff rides the circuit of installed chlorinators once a month to check on maintenance and answer questions raised by local water boards. The established water board serves as our point of contact with the community.
Our Team
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From left, our senior plumber, Joanes Bastin; a local Water Board member; and our National Rural Water Association water expert, Lupe Aragon. The first installation of the large chlorinator LF1500 (pictured) was made in May 2006. |
More International Action Videos:
- Haiti: What's Next? - Lindsay Mattison's Video Interview with The Inside Scoop - Emerald Planet
- Bringing Clean Water to Haiti: How It Works
- What's To Be Done?
- Clean Water for Historic School
- Promised Land in Cité Soleil
- Campaign for Clean Water
You can find more videos on the International Action YouTube Channel.
Photos: January 2010 Earthquake
Look at photos that show our work immediately after the earthquake and one month afterwards.
From Our Blog
Thousands of Livable Homes in Port-au-Prince Lay Vacant, Awaiting Damage Assessment
As many as 50% of the homes in the Port-au-Prince earthquake zone are likely to be habitable, but most Haitians refuse to occupy them because they are afraid that ongoing aftershocks will cause further collapses.
Where We Work
We've been busy lately. Take a look at the map of what we've done.




