Liberia SocietyLiberian NewsPress Release

18 Liberian Organizations Get Nearly $1.5M From USAID To Advocate For Policy Reforms

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In Health, Education And Governance Sectors

The USAID Liberia Civil Society Activity (CSA) on Tuesday, June 27, 2023,  distributed nearly $1.5 million in grants to 18 organizations to strengthen citizens’ ability to advocate for policy reforms in the education, health, and local governance sectors.

The money will enable the organizations to empower Parent Teachers Associations to effectively work with school administration; monitor and research school registration fees; develop guidelines to promote transparency and accountability with the county councils; establish legal clinics and assistance for CSOs engaged in advocacy for education policy reforms and implementation; and monitor the drug revolving fund.

Each organization will receive up to $75,000. The grants provide opportunities for CSOs to build linkages with their peers and constituencies at national and subnational levels. Through these linkages, CSOs can communicate reform achievements back to their constituencies and engage them in policy dialogue.

The grantees will help citizens in Montserrado, Margibi, Grand Bassa, Bong, Nimba and Lofa counties elevate citizens’ voices on the issues that matter to them.  CSA targeted health and education because citizens identified those issues as priorities in a Political Economic Analysis survey, a bottom-up development approach that relies on the opinions of citizens.

The grants were announced during a ceremony at Sinkor Palace in Congo Town, Monrovia. The event attracted  more than 80 people including senior government officials, civil society organizations, the grantees, officials from USAID and the United States Embassy and several USAID implementing partners including Internews and Democracy International. United States Embassy Deputy Chief of Missions Joel Maybury delivered keynote remarks.

Maybury said the grant launch event  was a celebration of the robust partnerships that USAID CSA has developed with the 18 organizations working to improve the lives of Liberians. He reiterated U.S. President Joseph Biden’s commitment to helping civil society continue its work of holding government accountable, defending citizens’ rights, addressing unmet needs, and advocating for policy reform.

He applauded the work of civil society organizations, especially women, in pressuring warlords and warring factions to end the Liberian civil war,  reducing the spread of Ebola and COVID-19. Civil society organizations, he said, also played a key role in the passage of Local Governance Act of 2018 and the Revenue Sharing Law, two landmark pieces of legislation aimed at decentralizing governance power.

The United States, he said, is proud  to contribute to Liberia’s impressive record of achievement through the CSA project.

“President Biden has called civil society the lifeblood of democracy because it comprises the collective action of ordinary people to meet citizens’ needs,’’ Maybury said. “Over the years, Liberia’s diverse array of civil society organizations has been instrumental in helping Liberia survive many crisis.’’

He highlighted the work of CSA’s partners FIND (Foundation for International Dignity)

and DELTA-HRF (Development Education Leadership Training in Action-Human Rights Foundation) for playing a key role in the establishment of the Bong County Council, the first elected county council established as part of the Local Governance Act.

“These two organizations are leading the way in advancing decentralization and giving citizens an active voice in determining their own development priorities at the county level,’’ Maybury said.

Maybury also highlighted the work of Integrity Watch Liberia (IWL) for working with the Ministry of Internal Affairs to develop standards and operating guidelines of the county councils. Government, he said, performs better when it collaborates with civil society.

The inauguration of CSA’s health and education civil society advocacy collaboration is a step in the right direction.

The CSOs working on health and education can provide oversight for the distribution of medicines nationwide, Maybury said. The U.S government provides enough malaria medications to treat everyone in the country, but most often those drugs are not available at health facilities because of theft or improper distribution, he said.

“Civil society and the media can help ensure that medicines reach those in need,’’ he said. “This and other work have the potential to be truly transformative. I look forward to seeing them catalyze meaningful change.’’

CSA is in the second year of a five-year program funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) implemented by DAI Global, LLC (DAI).  CSA’s goal is to advocate for policy reforms, policy implementation, and service delivery improvements through multi-stakeholder coalitions that build feedback loops among the government of Liberia, CSOs, and citizens.

CSA’s Chief of Party Stephen Terravecchia said the health and education grantees are in the process of forming coalitions to ensure that the organizations are learning from each other and building on their successes and learning from their challenges. The coalitions, he said, will work with the private sector around advocacy issues at the local and national levels.

CSA hopes the county councils will be a key entry point for the grantees and civil society to effectively engage government in the implementation of the Local Governance Act by ensuring that community stakeholders work toward solving tractable priority development issues, he said.

Abubakar Bah, Assistant Minister for Urban Planning at the Ministry of Internal Affairs, thanked USAID and the United States government for supporting Liberia’s decentralization process by strengthening the capacity of CSOs to contribute to nation building.

“CSOs are the heart and minds of citizens,’’ he said. “CSOs serve as a conduit for getting feedback from citizens on policy formation, legislation and implementation.’’

He urged the grantees to be accountable and transparent in how they use the funds entrusted to them. “It is our hope that these CSOs will reach remote areas where government cannot reach,’’ he said.

Speaking on behalf of the grantees, Harold Aidoo, executive director of Integrity Watch Liberia, underscored the importance of civil society in engaging government, raising awareness on critical issues, fighting corruption, and advocating for policy reform. He thanked USAID and CSA for helping the 18 organizations to continue speaking up for ordinary citizens.

“Civil Society brings perspectives that are often overlooked such as gender, disability, diversity and climate change,’’ he said. “CSOs are able to infuse transparency and accountability measures such as monitoring government policies and advocating for improved governance.’’

Below is the list of grantees:

  • Public Health Initiative (PHIL)
  • Youth Network for Positive Change (YOUNETPRO)
  • Efficient Research and Development Institute (ERDI)
  • Community Health Education and Social Services (CHESS-Liberia)
  • Humanity Above One-Self Foundation (HAOSF)
  • Volunteers United for Development (VUD)
  • Institute for Policy Evaluation and Research (IPER)
  • Institute for Research and Democratic Development (IREDD)
  • Rural Human Rights Activists Program (RHRAP)
  • Development Education Leadership Training in Action-Human Rights Foundation (DELTA-HRF)
  • Foundation for International Dignity (FIND)
  • Integrity Watch Liberia (IWL)
  • Youth Movement for Collective Action (U-Movement)
  • Institute for Democratic Action & Development (IDAD)
  • Youth Coalition for Education in Liberia (YOCEL)
  • Survivors Aid International Liberia Inc. (SAIL
  • Development Education Network (DEN-L)
  • Consortium of Business Development Service Providers of Liberia (CBDSPL)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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