Our History
The roots of Pure Water for the World (PWW) began in 1994 when a dentist from the Brattleboro, Vermont Rotary Club volunteered to go to a small Salvadoran village to provide medical services. He was moved by the poor living conditions and vowed to make a difference and do something. With the support of his Rotary Club he decided to help the people by providing rural villages with potable water. The success and interest of the club's activities soon outgrew the capacity of the Rotary Club. As a result, Pure Water for the World, Inc. was set up as a 501(c)(3) organization to carry out this important humanitarian effort.
PWW worked to identify a system that would best fit the demands of the rural villages and the people that the organization first sought to serve. After much effort and investigation PWW focused on individual sand filters that would go into each families home and PWW developed an educational component and follow up to insure the success of the installed sand filters.
Although the initial efforts were in El Salvador, most of the recent efforts have been in Honduras since the program was developed. PWW is now expanding into other countries after being recognized in Honduras as the leading organization dealing with providing clean, safe drinking water to the rural populations.
The household sand filters have made a huge difference in the villages and families where PWW has been able to install them where filters are in use the crying from stomach pains, death, and poor school attendance are a thing of the past. PWW has now installed individual sand filters to serve more than 60,000 people.
We have 9 projects operating throughout Honduras; we have a project in Haiti, and are about to start other projects in El Salvador, Nicaragua, Dominican Republic, and Guatemala. We have 23 people working in country on our projects plus 6 technically trained volunteers, in addition to assistance from Peace Corp volunteers.
Our program emphasizes education as a critical component of any program trying to provide clean, safe drinking water. We also provide parasitic treatment and follow up monitoring. In order to create jobs in the country, we build concrete filters at each project site where they are used; we also now have developed a plastic filter that can more easily be transported to the rural population and can be made in country on a portable molding machine. Besides slow sand filters for individuals and community based sand filters, PWW has also done solar pasteurization, and is looking at setting up a rain water harvesting program. We are expanding the technologies that we bring to each situation so that we can provide cost effective and appropriate technologies to solve the problems of that community.