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ENGINEERS WITHOUT BORDERS USA. ALAMO PROFESSIONAL CHAPTER. EWB Overview. Mission: Support community-driven development programs to design and implement sustainable engineering projects 350 projects in 45 countries 12,000 members in 250 chapters. EWB Overview. Typical Projects.
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ENGINEERS WITHOUT BORDERS USA ALAMO PROFESSIONAL CHAPTER
EWB Overview • Mission: Support community-driven development programs to design and implement sustainable engineering projects • 350 projects in 45 countries • 12,000 members in 250 chapters
Typical Projects • Potable water • Sanitation • Transportation • Electrical power
Example Projects • Composting latrines and rainwater catchment in Rwanda.
Example Projects • Wastewater sewer system and pedestrian bridge in El Salvador.
Alamo Chapter Progress • September 2012 • Chapter initiation at Southwest Research Institute • October 2012 - January 2013 • Preliminary chapter documents • Preliminary officer selection • February 2013 • EWB-USA chapter approval • February – June 2013 • Program searching and application • July 2013 • EWB-USA program approval – Papachacra, Bolivia
First Program:Papachacra, Bolivia • Reasons for selection: • Connections to partner NGO – Engineers In Action (engineersinaction.org). • Recommended by EWB-USA for our chapter. • Well-defined and appropriate size for a chapter’s first program.
First Program:Papachacra, Bolivia • Located in the Department of Tarija • 11,965 ft above sea level • 120 families • Primary income/sustenance from agriculture (mostly potatoes) • School teaches until 6thgrade • Community speaks Spanish, Quechua, Aymara • Needs: potable water, irrigation, education, health.
First Program:Papachacra, Bolivia • The municipal government has already implemented a piping system to each house, but the water supply (spring fed) is not sufficient. • The current system needs analysis and a filtration system, as it is suspected that the water is contaminated. • Additional springs exist near the community that could be utilized.
Initial Chapter andProgram Timeline • September – December 2013: • Select Project Manager • Hold chapter elections • Plan and travel on 1st assessment trip • January – May 2014: • Preliminary design • Fundraising • 2nd assessment trip • June – November 2014: • Finalize design • 1st implementation trip
How Does Travel Work? • Chapter members travel to the community on assessment, implementation, and monitoring trips. • EWB-USA has a maximum travel team size of 8 people; typically 2-4 for assessment/monitoring, 4-6 for implementation. • Both traveling and non-traveling members are needed. Regardless of whether you travel, the majority of the work is done here. • Travelers will be selected by the project manager.
How To Get Involved • Work is needed in many areas beside direct engineering. Several committees will be formed to manage these needs: • Finance • Fundraising • Advertising/Communications • Website Design and Management • Project Management • Project Support • Chapter Membership • UTSA Outreach • Configuration Management • Please indicate your interests to allow us to pair you with a group.
What Next? • To officially join the chapter, register with EWB-USA at ewb-usa.org. • There is a $100 annual fee for professionals. 20% goes to the chapter, 15% to the region, and the remainder to national. • We will contact you shortly based on your responses to the surveys. • Check out our website for updates and more information: ewb-alamo.org.
Next Meeting • Our next meeting will be Tuesday, September 24th at 6:30pm at the same location: Northwest Hills Christian Church, 9560 Potranco Road. • Questions?