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Public Toilets In Goris; USAID Funds Flushed Down The Drain?

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  • Public Toilets In Goris; USAID Funds Flushed Down The Drain?

    PUBLIC TOILETS IN GORIS; USAID FUNDS FLUSHED DOWN THE DRAIN?

    hetq
    12:02, February 24, 2012

    Here's another story highlighting a good project gone sour. It has
    to do with the USAID funded public toilets in the southern Armenian
    town of Goris.

    Even though it was built in 2007 with USAID support, the restrooms
    don't work. I wanted to find out why.

    My first stop was the Goris Municipality. The toilet is located in
    a park that is municipal land.

    I spoke with Gagik Hayrapetyan, who heads the Municipality's Staff
    Office. He was the one who told me about the USAID's participation
    in the constriction of the restrooms along with installing trash
    receptacles in Goris.

    Mr. Hayrapetyan suggested that I go and speak with Argady Mardyan,
    Director of the Gusan Ashot Cultural Center. The Center manages the
    park where the toilets are located.

    So far so good.

    Mr. Mardyan told me he had nothing to do with operating the public
    restrooms.

    "What does culture have in common with toilets?" he exclaimed. "We all
    know that the Cultural Center is a municipal body whose activities are
    supervised by the mayor's office. True, the restrooms are located in
    the park but since they were built the municipality has yet to create
    an employment position to run the toilets."

    In essence, dear readers, the restrooms have never been opened to
    the public because the municipality has never hired an attendant to
    service them. I guess this makes sense in a weird sort of way.

    But Mardyan's argument doesn't jive with the USAID's projections
    as set out in the "BRIDGE" project that envisaged the creation of
    15 new jobs in Goris (2 gardeners, 3 cleaners, 4 technical aides,
    6 attendants to be paid from park revenues). Today, the municipality
    hires out 7 individuals to manage the park.

    The Project also mandated that the Goris Municipality take over
    management of the park from the cultural center and that it draft a
    plan of cultural and sports activities.

    Mardyan said that the toilets used to operate in the past on a
    sporadic basis. It depended on when they could find people willing
    to do the job.

    He told me that the town was now ready to hire someone willing to work
    and get paid based on the number of people using the toilets at 50
    AMD a visit. The town would pay the electric and water expenses. The
    attendant however, would have to pay for two rolls of toilet paper
    a day from his or her own pocket.

    "If there is anyone willing to work under these conditions, I am
    ready to present them with this restroom as a gift," exclaimed Mardyan.

    He told me that a public restroom operate din the park years ago but
    nobody used it.

    "People would do their business under the trees, not in the restroom,
    even though it was free. It's a question of our mentality."

    Mardyan complained that people urinate on the steps leading to the
    cultural center and that staff have to wash the area down with several
    buckets of water.

    "The place stinks terribly in the summer. This is how locals treat
    the cultural center. Don't you think I want those restrooms to operate
    normally?" said an exasperated Mardyan.

    When I asked, Mardyan said the restrooms were in good shape with
    round the clock water.

    At the end of our talk, Mardyan said he hoped that on my next visit
    the restroom would be up and running so that we could discuss something
    more pleasant; say on a cultural level.

    I finally got a chance to speak to Goris Mayor Nelson Voskayan.

    When I asked him whether it would be preferable to create a permanent
    job position of restroom attendant/manager, with a stable salary,
    Voskayan shook his head.

    "From a financial point of view, operating the toilets remains an
    important but difficult matter. Repair work will commence in the summer
    and we'll adopt some new approaches to resolve this sad chapter."



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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