A few weeks ago we had the net distribution training for the local heath workers who would be conducting the net distributions in their respective towns. Like the other training events this one took place at the health post in the ever famous Dindefelo. A few nights of listening to the World Cup coverage by the BBC on my awesome short-wave radio later and we were ready to begin prepping for the net distribution in Pellel. I had tried to get my dad to loan us his donkey cart for the day to pick up the 397 nets that we needed for the distribution. And course since we were asking the day before even my dad figured he should try to get some money out of this…My counterpart Nene Galle tried doing the same thing the day before at the health post (her husband has a cart too), despite the fact that I reminded them that they were all getting FREE mosquito nets from the Senegalese government, and that it wasn’t my responsibility to get money from the US government through the Peace Corps to distribute their nets…alas both families insisted on getting at least 2500cfa a piece for using their carts (a typical cart fare for that trip should only be about 500cfa). In the end Badji, the healthpost director from Dindefelo who was overseeing the entire distribution for the area, decided to send a cart from Dindefelo and pay that other man instead. I made sure to tell both families in Pellel that because of their bickering, running us around, and wasting a day of prep, we paid someone else to do it. That might have been a little mean but I needed to set a precedent in town that I’m not there to just give money handouts.
Distribution time!




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