Saturday, March 16, 2013

Water: World Water Day March 22nd

I went to the store today to buy some basic necessities. I decided to walk down the soda isle to grab something to drink. It happened to be the same isle as the one where they keep bottled water. I was shocked to see that most of the bottled water was sold out. Think about that for a minute. In a country where clean water comes out of every tap it is hard to keep bottled water on the shelf.

As a whole we are a very wasteful country. We go out of our way to create waste. We will drink bottled water instead of grabbing a cup and getting water from the tap. There are places in this world who are begging for having the same luxuries as we do. Having the ability to go to the sink and get some water is a foreign concept for most of the world.

In the Dominican Republic I could buy a Dasani bottle of water, 20oz, for 10 pesos. That works out to about 25 cents per bottle. They keep the price there low because so many people use the bottles and it keeps people like me from coming in and investing in the city water supply. In the US we pay $1.25 per bottle from a vending machine. It is mind boggling why we pay so much more in the US for the same water.

After spending a week in a country with around 8 million people, and none of them are able to drink water from a tap, it strikes me that we have the same habits as them even though we have clean water. We could easily grab a reusable bottle when on the run instead of using bottled water. At the very least we could start to recycle the bottles we use so they wont end up in a land fill. One of the biggest challenges we face in the Dominican Republic is changing the way people classify trash and recyclables. Educating people about what can be recycled and why its bad to just throw it on the side of the road is not as easy as it seems. Two people I met in Santiago are currently working on a project to help educate the people on how to classify recyclables. Time will tell how they do, however, they know how hard it is to changes peoples perspectives.

The task before us is difficult but not impossible. During my time there I noticed that taxi drivers help keep the cities moving. Why can't we use that to our advantage and have advertisements about recycling and basic sanitation in every taxi. This seems like its too easy of a solution, it is because the taxi's are all government owned. Getting them to agree to anything like that means they have to see a benefit to them. In a country with little regulation that all goes unenforced getting them to see how it can benefit them personally is a tall order. This idea to give the island clean water to every house is not just about that. It is about improving and changing the education of an entire culture.

For World Water Day this Friday I am asking that no one uses bottled water for a day, and recycle every bottle you see. If we could do that for one day it would make a huge difference. Simple changes can add up over time.

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