Showing posts with label Shipping Containers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shipping Containers. Show all posts

Monday, 24 April 2017

The Shipping Container has Arrived!


Finally! This shipping container, which left at the end of October, has arrived at the Kahama District Hospital! You can imagine our frustration at the container being delayed for so long at the port in Dar-es-Salaam, especially when the port and storage costs were rising daily! 

Thanks to the joint efforts of our agent Emmanuel, and Barry T. here in Canada, who put us in touch with Max who was able to visit the port on a regular basis, a large proportion of the accumulated fees were waived and we were able to have the container released. 
A great reminder of the amazing support we have received over the years from Big Steel Box, Penticton.


Joseph helping hospital staff to unload medical resources.




The motorbike wasn't a part of the shipment! 

Thank you so much to everyone who donated resources, funds, time and skills towards filling and shipping our fifth forty-foot shipping container! 

We had already decided not to ship anymore containers for the foreseeable future, and given the angst of this experience it was a great decision!  

Contact us to donate towards our programs. 

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Wednesday, 2 November 2016

2016 Container Contents


We will continue to take resources in our suitcases and to raise funds for our life-changing programs.

These are the donated items in our latest container, which set out for port in October 2016;
a heartfelt thank you to everyone who donated resources, time, skills and funds We couldn't do it without you!

MEDICAL

6   hospital beds & mattresses
12 boxes of medical books
42 boxes of medical supplies
4   boxes of crutches/cranes
8   wheelchairs
7   exam tables
2   spinner sterilizers
2   walkers
4   IV stands
4   boxes of medical binders
4   boxes of medical equipment
2   weigh scales
3   medical cabinets
1   microscope
1   pipet washer/rinser
3   hospital cribs
3   medical models & posters
1   x-ray viewer
1   baby weigh scales
EDUCATIONAL / TRAINING

8     boxes of sports equipment
45   boxes of sports uniforms
1     computer
37   boxes books
117 boxes of teacher resources
5     sewing machines
6     boxes of sewing fabric & accesories
42   chairs/stools
53   boxes of school supplies
3      filing cabinets
3      wooden tables
MUVUMA ORPHANAGE

24"  Cooking stove
Yamaha 5000 Generator
12 volt battery
SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS

19 boxes of tools and supplies
1   set of store accesories
5    boxes of coat-hangers
1    fabric rack
1    shoe rack
1     box of supplies
2    clothing racks
5    brick making machines & parts
A portion of the educational resources are dedicated to the Muvuma Orphanage, as are most of the household and small business supplies.

HOUSEHOLD SUPPLIES
76 boxes of bedding and towels, 12 boxes of dishes and cooking items, 4 mirrors, 107 boxes of clothing and shoes, 3 radio/stereos, 5 bicycles, 2 boxes of seeds, 1 compost bin, an artificial Christmas tree & decorations, 2 microwaves.

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Tuesday, 1 November 2016

The 5th One Person Shipping Container Departs

www.theonepersonproject.org

So many people to thank for helping us to ship our 5th forty-foot container! 

Penticton Big Steel Box have given us incredible support over the years and we totally appreciate all that Berry and Smith Trucking and Maurer Crane Services have done to help us along the way. 

Penticton Home Hardware and Summerland BC Tree Fruits gave us space for our storage containers (which were generously loaned to us by of Big Steel Box) and Penticton Wal-Mart dedicated parking space to the large sea-container. 

We couldn't do what we do without your help and financial and physical donations. 


Volunteers Dan B. and Al J. picked up and delivered 2 exam tables, which were generously  donated by Dr. Westby, Penticton.

Thanks to Interior Health, medical professionals, a number of School Districts, sports organizations, and local businesses and organizations we were able to fill the container with life-changing resources. 

We couldn't do this without our volunteers!
Volunteer Ray L. picking up and delivering 30 chairs.
Thank you to all the families, individuals and organizations that stepped up to collect resources for our sponsor-community in Kahama. And a huge thank you to everyone who volunteered their time and energy helping us to sort and pack the donations into the container. 
Bryan B. a long-time volunteer and One Person Director Susan 
This is likely to be our last shipping container read the February 2016 blog to see why. The next blog will itemize the container contents. 


You can donate on line www.theonepersonproject.org or at the Summerland Credit Union or mail to The One Person Project 10108 Julia Street, Summerland, V0H 1Z5 


Asante Sana!
Thank you!





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Thursday, 11 February 2016

Why we will not be shipping sea-containers after 2016

A thank you from Go Rwanda and the community of Muhanga
Our first 40' shipping container was sent to Muhanga in Rwanda in 2010. It was the biggest and most impactful donation the area had ever received.  

We subsequently sent three containers to Kahama, Tanzania and will ship our fourth this year. Again, even just our first shipment was the most impactful ever received. Below is a sample of the medical and educational resources donated to us and shipped by us in 2013: 

A large ultrasound scanner, 15 hospital beds & 13 mattresses & 1 pressure mattress, an operating table overhead cover, a microscope, 2 physiotherapy tables, a birthing  table, a medication cart, 67 boxes of medical supplies, 20 boxes of medical text books, 80 boxes of operating room drape, a defibrillator, a blood pressure cuff, 6 walkers, 20 crutches,3 wheelchairs & accessories, 4 commodes,1 box of eye glasses, 17 boxes pediatric ward toys, 15 boxes of bedding & towels, 1 box of scrubs, 1 whiteboard and 4 boxes of soap and educational and other resources.

150 boxes of library/text books, 23 boxes of teacher resources, 49 boxes of school supplies, 49 units chalk board, notice boards, chairs with fold down desks, 4 boxes of sports equipment and 57 boxes of sports uniforms

Plus almost a third of the container was filled with sewing machines for cooperatives and small business, resources for the Amani Children's Clinic & the Faraja Orphanage, tools for a men's woodworking cooperative and much more!

As you can see, by raising around $20,000 to purchase and ship a container we can send hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of resources. But we are aware that it would not be helpful to the community of Kahama to just keep sending items for the sake of it. 

Having strengthened the medical and educational systems we now plan to concentrate on providing scholarships for further education, and partnering with entrepreneurs. The citizens of Kahama do not need outsiders coming in to fix them or give them handouts. They are very capable people who simply do not have the means to pay for education/vocational training or to set up a business. 

We are not ruling out shipping in the future, though truth be told it will be blissful to take a break from spending thousands of man-hours soliciting, collecting, sorting, itemizing, packing and loading the resources and equipment! Not to mention Brenda's (One Person co-founder and President) time spent on paperwork and dealing with logistics of getting the containers from point A to B via the rest of the alphabet!  (Remember we are a volunteer organization - no one gets paid and everyone pays their own way - even on our trips to Tanzania and Rwanda.)

We are extremely grateful to everyone who has donated resources, volunteered their time at 'crate-days' or helped us to raise funds to purchase and ship the containers. 




You can donate on line www.theonepersonproject.org or at the Summerland Credit Union or mail to The One Person Project 10108 Julia Street, Summerland, V0H 1Z5 


Asante Sana!


Tuesday, 17 November 2015

8th Annual Gala Raises $6,000

Our successful Dinner-Dance and Auction raised just over $6,000! 
Thank you to everyone who helped make this evening a success, including Bobby Bovenzi & the Nankama Drummers & Dancers.


 Everyone loves the audience participation!



One Person President, Brenda Lowe gives an update of progress so far. Funds raised at the event will be used towards shipping our 5th 40' shipping-container to our sponsor-community in Kahama. 
Each year our supporters get to see where their dollars are directed, and see pictures of the children and families we are supporting. 
Tickets please! 



 Thank you to Knights of Columbus Jamie, pictured above and Lorne below, for tending the bar all evening. 
Your smiles were appreciated!

And many thanks to DJ Doug for once again donating his time and giving us the opportunity to dance 'till midnight! 

For more information, to volunteer or to make a donation contact me , mail to The One Person Project, 10108 Julia Street, Summerland, B.C. V0H 1Z5  donate on-line or make a payment into our account at the Summerland Credit Union (Summerland, British Columbia).  




Friday, 22 May 2015

2015 Trip: Kahama District Hospital

Unloading the Container in the Hospital Grounds
www.theonepersonproject.org

Peter (back) and Joseph and Emmanuel
The medical resources in our 4th shipping container (the 3rd donated to the District of Kahama) included hospital beds and mattresses, 300 boxes of medical supplies, 15 boxes of medical books, shelves, cribs, walkers and canes. The hospital also received 33 boxes of dehydrated food to be split between the wards and the children's Amani Clinic. 
Students from the nearby Nurses School pick up text books
We delivered baby clothes and knitted blankets and hats



For more information, to volunteer or to make a donation contact me , mail to The One Person Project, 10108 Julia Street, Summerland, B.C. V0H 1Z5  donate on-line or make a payment into our account at the Summerland Credit Union (Summerland, British Columbia).  

           
Asante Sana!
Thank you!


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Saturday, 2 August 2014

Why we ship donations from here: What we buy there

www.theonepersonproject.org

We chose to support Kahama because poverty is wide-spread and acute and there is little outside help. There is no tourist trade.  Apart from the occasional European gold miners who drop in to the banks or bars we are usually the only mzungus (white people) that the townspeople see. Out in the villages - we are the only ones! By bolstering the twin pillars of health and education our goal is to ensure a stronger local economy, a healthier population and a generation with hope in their lives.


Sending Donated Items. We have shipped 4 forty-foot sea containers to East Africa. The first went to Muhanga, Rwanda and the others to our sponsor community in Kahama, Tanzania. We did our homework before we began to collect donations; we visited the community and asked questions; we read widely and learned about the mistakes and successes of other attempts to help in African countries. In the end basic math made the decision for us. By raising $20,000 to purchase and ship a container we can provide $200,000 - $300,000 of project aid. (Project aid is a partnership whereby the villagers participate in the process with the ultimate goal of self-sustainability.) 

This is by no means an easy route. We are a small volunteer Board & Committee that dedicates hundreds of man-hours to collecting and sorting donations and then countless hours fundraising to ship them!  We are so thankful to the volunteers who stand beside us in a parking lot to sort and pack in the heights of summer and depths of a Canadian winter. And of course we would have nothing to send if it weren't for the generosity of our own community and organizations across BC.



A box of pencil crayons costs around US$8.00 a soccer ball around US$50 in Tanzania – imagine the cost of purchasing just one hospital bed there and having it delivered hundreds of miles to middle-of-nowhere Kahama! Our priority has been to ship medical and educational resources to strengthen the community and provide a solid foundation on which it can build. Using that $20,000 to purchase resources in Tanzania would have had very little impact compared to:

Medical. The Kahama  District Hospital (the only hospital for a population of one million people) receives wards-full of hospital beds, mattresses and linens, operating tables, OR drapes, gowns, gloves and booties, examination tables, birth kits, microscopes, blood pressure cuffs and much more.

Technology. As in the West, health workers in African countries depend on communication tools like cell phones or the Internet to refer patients to specialist facilities, to place orders for drugs and equipment, and to share medical knowledge.  We deliver donated computers and equipment to the hospital and the primary Teacher Resource Centre.

Education. The Teacher Resource Centres and schools receive thousands of text and library books (for the township and 240 villages) and invaluable teacher and classroom resources. 



Empowering Women. We deliver sewing machines and supplies to set up sewing co-operatives and provide income-making skills. Where we differ from many organizations is that we take self-funded trips to Kahama to distribute the items and monitor progress. We can see first-hand whether the resources are making a positive difference, we can see what works and what doesn’t and change our operations accordingly. Another major advantage is that for the rest of the year we have daily contact with Emmanuel, our Agent in Kahama. As well as shipping we have set up a number of programs in Kahama and have built an orphanage. At this point we intend to ship one final container to Kahama in 2016.  

Clothing. Indiscriminately sending clothing to impoverished areas can cause problems as the garments often end up flooding the black-market and depriving local garment-makers and sellers of their income. We do not ship a lot of clothing but when we do we have a major advantage over many organizations as we regularly visit the region and can see the results of our donations and make changes if they are causing problems. The families and orphanages that receive the donated clothing and shoes would not be buying clothes from the local markets, they would simply go without. 

Buying locally. When we can, we do purchase resources and supplies in Kahama. Our strategy of strengthening the whole community through sending medical, educational and entrepreneurial resources will translate into locals buying local, a win-win situation! At present most families are not in the position to help the economy – they live day to day surviving on the ‘crops’ they can grow in the patches of earth outside their huts. The ripple-effect purchases we do make in the Kahama region include:

Bicycles Purchasing locally helps the economy end ensures access to the correct parts and tools.
Bikes for the HIV/AIDS Association: This will enable workers to reach more people in their outlying communities and provide them with support and palliative care.
Bikes for families: Recipients spend less time walking (to fetch water or take a sick relative to a clinic for example) and can dedicate time to growing food and caring for their families. Students can get back from school in time to read in the daylight!
Bikes for small business opportunities: delivering water or fertilizer for example.

Desks, tables, chairs, bookshelves.  We commission local carpenters to build the desks, seats and shelving that we have donated to the Amani Children’s Care and Treatment Clinic (HIV/AIDS) the principal Teacher Resource Centre and the newly built Muvuma Orphanage (updated Dec. '14) We have also delivered hand tools, electrical tools and a generator to a wood-working group in the remote village, Llomelo. 



Livestock. Meat Goats can be bred and used as a source of food and income.Milk goats provide health benefits to families. A healthy dairy goat can yield up to 200 litres of milk a year, plus the family can use and sell the goat manure.
Poultry provides maximum production for minimum costs compared to most livestock. The chickens will address basic nutritional needs as well as generate income for the women in poultry cooperatives - meat, eggs and manure.

Clothing and food. On our visits we do also buy clothing for children from the local market stalls. When we are not in Kahama, Emmanuel makes local food and clothing purchases on our behalf. 


For more information, to volunteer or to make a donation contact me , mail to The One Person Project, 10108 Julia Street, Summerland, B.C. V0H 1Z5  donate on-line or make a payment into our account at the Summerland Credit Union (Summerland, British Columbia).  


               Strengthen one person - strengthen the family - strengthen the community.

Friday, 14 February 2014

Making News

www.theonepersonproject.org 

One of our mentions on Shaw TV News  Our 4th shipping container is almost ready to go!


Monday, 15 April 2013

Kahama District - Distributing the Shipping Container Resources / 2013


 
Dr Andrew and Athanis happy to see the shipping container arrive at the Kahama District Hospital. The leaves on the Kahama Friendship tree were purchased and signed by our supporters in Canada;  we raise around $16,000 to purchase and ship each container. See the Nov. 9th 2012 blog for a list of contents.
Beds and other medical resources were carried in to the hospital and a further160 barrels and boxes went to the Amani Clubhouse at the far end of the compound. Classroom and teacher resources were taken into the Teacher Resource Centre, and library and text books were transferred to the previous shipping container to be stored before processing. Both beautifully decorated containers have been donated to the hospital.

LeAnne, Brenda and a team of helpers from the hospital spent a 12 hour day visiting 11 schools in 11 remote villages to distribute soccer/netball uniforms and pumps and balls.
The children hold messages thanking Iron Man Canada for the donated shirts

A decent soccer ball costs $50 US, about as much as many Tanzanians earn a month in a full time job!

One Person believes in the concept of sport for development – that sport is not just an end in itself, but also an effective tool to help improve the lives of children, families and communities. Participating in sports allows young men to have a sense of pride and something to strive towards and allows girls to have status and opportunities they do not usually receive. Even the presence of one soccer ball can increase school attendance, which is doubly important as most schools and sports teams have HIV Prevention Programs.

Next the truck headed out to the men's woodworking co-op in Llomelo. We passed on donations of hand/power tools and a much needed generator.


The delivery team were entertained with food, and traditional dance and music. The woodworkers then presented Brenda with this beautiful wooden map of the Shinyanga Region (North Tanzania) with the district of Kahama in the middle.


 We have supported the Llomelo men's co-op for a number of years, donating tools and commissioning desks and tables for the Kahama Teacher Resource Centre.  The photos below are from the 2012 trip.

Before
And after

 Strengthen one person - strengthen the family - strengthen the community



For more information or to make a donation contact me , mail to The One Person Project, 10108 Julia Street, Summerland, B.C. V0H 1Z5 or donate on-line  


Saturday, 23 February 2013

3rd Shipping Container Arrives in Kahama, Tanzania

www.theonepersonproject.org

February 21st. The shipping container finally arrives
in the 3rd week of the One Person Volunteer Trip
 
 
 
The container is placed beside the previous container in the grounds of the Kahama Regional Hospital. The only hospital for
a population of 1 million.

Friday, 16 November 2012

The 3rd Shipping Container Heads Out To Tanzania


The One Person Project


It's always a great feeling to be closing the doors for the last time!
Brenda, Peter, Denise, Sheena and Brian


THANK YOU to The Burgoyne's and Benjamin Moore for sponsoring the container and many thanks to everyone who purchased a Maple Leaf for our Kahama Friendship Tree.

GLOBAL TV Covered the Event



Charyll, a member of the Friends of Amani sub-committee

The wonderful guys from Maurer Crane Service and Berry Smith Trucking
 
 

 
A HUGE THANK YOU TO EVERYONE WHO MADE THIS HAPPEN - AGAIN!