The NLGFC has applauded district grievance redress and management committees and district environmental subcommittees for their positive response at the end of district based trainings recently.
In an interview with this paper, the Environmental and Social Safeguards Specialist at the NLGFC Mr. Ephron Gausi said the trainings were aimed at orienting the committees to the newly developed harmonized manual for use in handling of grievances for implementation of social protection programmes such as the enhanced public works pilot project.
Gausi said the trainings were critical as the manual had streamlined and rationalised processes in addressing grievances across all social support programmes and humanitarian response activities such as social cash transfer, the public works programme, community
Ephron Gausi- Environmental and Social Safeguards Specialist livelihoods enhancement, and school meals program. Gausi said the trainings also emphasized on the fact that,’ grievance redress mechanisms are recognised as critical tools for transparency and accountability in social support programmes’.
He said, ’this is critical as programme implementation naturally generates complaints particularly where there are misunderstandings or deviation from agreed modus operandi’.
The district based trainings also provided a scope of the institutions, instruments, methods, and processes of achieving a resolution in a project area.
The trainings involved 25 people and were conducted in the EPWP pilot districts of Chitipa, Karonga, Kasungu, Dowa, Nkhotakota, Lilongwe, Balaka, Chiradzulu, Phalombe and Blantyre.
The one day training also saw participants given hand sanitizers and disposable face masks which were provided by GIZ as a safeguard against COVID 19. The training also observed the one meter apart COVID 19 social distancing best practice.