Water

Empowered by water: Women’s quality of life improves with household access to water supply

Women can save time to find avenues of additional income 

 
By Ruby Sarkar
Published: Saturday 22 July 2023
Anita Chaudhary (centre), head of the Garhmau village water and sanitation committee, with other members (Photograph: Ruby Sarkar)

Anita Chaudhary, a resident of Garhmau village in Madhya Pradesh, is one of the 56 women felicitated by the Union government in March this year for her efforts to improve the water situation in her area.

As head of Garhmau's water and sanitation committee since 2020, she has been monitoring supply of water to households in the village in Mohkhed tehsil, Chhindwara district, and sensitising other residents on conservation.

Two decades ago, Chaudhary, like most women in her village, spent a large part of the day walking 2-5 km to fetch water for her household’s needs.

“We had no time to take care of our children.Our health declined as we covered long distances on foot with heavy water containers; some women were gravely injured” she said.

In 2015, Madhya Pradesh introduced the Mohkhed Water Supply Scheme to provide household water connections in the tehsil. The scheme was later brought under the aegis of the Centre's Jal Jeevan Mission, 2019 that aims to ensure drinking water supply through taps in all households by 2024.

The women in the tehsil took charge to ensure proper implementation of the scheme. Mamta Sudama Doble of Mau village, for instance, decided to play a greater role in governance.

“I stood as a sarpanch candidate for the village panchayat in 2012, on the promise of addressing water issues. But I lost. In 2022, when I contested again, the government had started supplying water to households, but I was elected on the promise of keeping the system running properly,” she said.

Further, the women nominated one or two members from each of the self-help groups already present in the tehsil to join the water and sanitation committee, as mandated by the Jal Jeevan Mission. Half the members of the committee should be women.

“We received training and kits from the government to test the quality of water supplied. If any village resident complains, we check the water and coordinate with officials to resolve issues,” said Chaudhary.

Currently, there are some 8,500 water connections across 32-33 villages in the tehsil, said Basant Kumar Belvanshi, manager of Mohkhed Water Supply Scheme. Around 50,000 residents benefit from this.

The results have not only eased women’s water woes, but also empowered them. In general, women in Mohkhed work as daily-wage labourers, earning R150-200 a day.

But Chaudhary, for instance, opened a general provision store in 2021 that provides her additional income each month. Other women have taken up sewing or tutoring.

Such changes are reflected across the country, as more households are supplied water under the Jal Jeevan Mission.

“In many states, we see women’s health and livelihoods improve as the burden of fetching water is lifted off their shoulders,” said Sushmita Sengupta, senior programme manager, water, at Delhi-based think tank Centre for Science and Environment.

This was first published in Down To Earth’s print edition (dated July 1-15, 2023)

Subscribe to Daily Newsletter :

Comments are moderated and will be published only after the site moderator’s approval. Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name. Selected comments may also be used in the ‘Letters’ section of the Down To Earth print edition.