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PART II. 3 STAGES OF CMP PROCESS

Designing and implementation of CMP is a 3 stage process:

  1. Formation of village-level CMP Committee

  2. Identification of CMPs through PRA

  3. Planning and implementation of CMP

STAGE 1. FORMATION OF CMP COMMITTEES

STAGE 2. IDENTIFICATION OF CMP THROUGH PRA

Step 1: Preparatory Meeting

Description:

The district officers concerned with members of the province team conduct a brief meeting to have a discussion on general food security situation. The information for such a discussion could be gathered from various data and information sources and their daily experience in the village. They also prepare all the logistics of the Workshop.

Objectives:

To ensure that the Workshop is well prepared and that the food security situation in the village is well understood by the facilitation team so that they can help the villagers formulate a project idea which effectively address the food security problem.

Method:

  1. District officers individually review available documents on the food security situation of the village including food production, socio-economic situation, livelihoods, farming systems. This should include population data, reports from any previous PRA workshops, commune and village development plans and other reports that might be available. Information from the FSPR baseline study report will be also useful if it is available. Information collected earlier in the village should already be available from such PRA tools as wealth ranking, seasonal calendar, tool used to find out about the number of food insecurity months, problem analysis charts and problems rankings.

  2. Facilitation team have a meeting to discuss food security situation of the village. District officers may need to brief other team members from provincial and national levels.

  3. Make all the logistical arrangements necessary to conduct the workshop.

  4. Prepare all the material such as pens, documentation sheets, flipcharts which will be needed for the workshop.

Step 2: Informing the Community About the Village Planning Workshop

Objective:

Before conducting the workshops, residents of the village need to be informed about the upcoming event and should understand the objectives of the workshop. Villagers should be made aware of their workshop and be able to propose participants for the workshop.

Method:

Community Leaders

  1. Prepare formal letters to invite community leaders to the workshop. The leaders include commune council, village chief, VDC chief and members and leaders of CBOs existing in the village.

  2. The letter should inform about (i) name of the workshop; (ii) objective of the workshop; (iii) date, time and the place; (iv) who facilitate the workshop; (v) benefits of the workshop; (vi) likely outcome of the workshop; (vii) what happens after the workshop; (viii) who are expected to participate in the workshop.

  3. The letter should clearly state that villagers from different geographic area, economic status and especially disadvantaged groups should be informed and encouraged to participate in the workshop. Emphasis that workshop participation is voluntary and that some 50 people should participate and include the following groups/types of people: minimum of 5 villagers belonging to the poorest group of the village, all geographic areas of the village, farmers representing the different farming systems, good mix of different age groups ranging from the youth to the elderly, participation of women and in particular female headed households is encouraged, families with health problems, families not having access to clean drinking water, landless people, people representing other interest groups like village committees, informal and formal groups, water user associations, community based organizations, entrepreneurs., Village chief, VDC members, commune council representative, influential and respected individuals, Pagoda monk.

  4. The letter should “sell the workshop” to the village representatives.

Community Members

  1. For other community members, develop an attractive flier of A3 or larger size paper to be displayed in different points in the village, preferably community gathering places. 10 to 12 fliers per village would expose different section of the villagers to the workshop event.

  2. The contents of the fliers are the same as above but it should avoid formal language. Use simple langeage and attractive design to “sell the workshop” to the community.

Keep in mind:

Step 3: Introduction of the Workshop

At the beginning of the workshop, sufficient information should be presented to the workshop participants including:

Step 4: Problem Identification

Objective:

How to facilitate

  1. What does food security mean?

  2. What are the reasons for insufficient food?

  3. Categorise the listed problems into three groups.

  4. Sub-categorise the problems into 3 sub-groups.

    (i) Problems at pre-production stageFamily / individual farm level problems
    Community level problems
    Both
    (ii) Problems at production stageFamily / individual farm level problems
    Community level problems
    Both
    (iii) Problems at post-harvest stage Family / individual farm level problems
    Community level problems
    Both
  5. Presentation to the all participants by the group representatives.

Step 5: Prioritisation of Identified Problems

Objective:

How to facilitate

  1. Explain the objective of the ranking.

  2. In the same group, the participants select:

  3. Presentation to all participants by group representatives.

  4. Select and rank the top 6 problems from the all problems listed by all groups. Voting with stones.

  5. Count all the votes and write down the rank for each problem and announce the result.

  6. Suggest that the top 6 problems will be considered for the further planning in smaller groups (every smaller group dealing with two Problems)

Step 6: PAPP MATRIX - Planning on the basis of Analysis of Problems and Potentials

Objective:

To let groups of community members analyse problems, causes, livelihood strategies and potentials and proposed activities to address this problems.

How to facilitate:

6.1. Divide all workshop participants into three groups and provide each group with two of the six highest ranked problems to be considered in the PAPP Matrix.

6.2. Clarify the objectives of this task. Refer to the different columns of the PAPP Matrix to explain the matrix.

6.3. Explain to the participants that they will now discuss the different problems they mentioned during the brainstorming. This process will take some time. Start with the problem which was ranked highest among the two problems.

Keep in mind:

6.4. Causes of the problem

6.5. Livelihood strategy

6.6. Potentials

6.7. Proposed Community Micro Project

6.8. Presentation to the all groups by group representatives

Existing situation
Description of the problem, its location and impacts.
Influencing factors
Why do we have this problem?
How do you cope with this problem. What activities do help you to minimise the problem or the cause?Human/natural/material/ social resources available to solve the problem or causes of problem. What has the village already done to solve the problem?jMeasures to be taken.
How to solve the problem or causes of problems.
RANK
=
Problem
=
Causes of the problem
=
Farmers’ solution
=
Local resources
=
Proposed community micro project
 
      

Step 7: Ranking of Proposed Micro Project Ideas

Objective:

To make a ranked list of micro project ideas that will be used as a priority list for further planning.

How to facilitate

  1. Explain the objective of the ranking to all workshop participants and remind them about the selection criteria and conditions for community micro projects.

  2. Score and rank the suggested 6 CMP ideas in order of importance - highest to low, in groups.

Step 8: Feasibility Check of Proposed Community Micro Projects

Objective:

To screen the proposed micro project ideas according to the community micro project criteria to ensure that on projects which are feasible will be considered for the further planning.

Method:

  1. Let each group assess feasibility of the 6 CMP ideas by asking “If you are given $900 of external inputs, which of the CMP would you like to have?

  2. Proposed community micro projects are then checked against the following criteria:

  3. Presentation to all participants by group representatives.

  4. Select CMP ideas which could be implemented with $900 external inputs. It could be only one CMP or a couple of CPMs depending on the scale of the projects and internal resources available for the CMPs.

  5. CMP which are rejected because they do not fit the above criteria may be very important for a particular village and the facilitation team should refer the project idea to the VDC and Commune Council for their follow up.

STAGE 3: PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION OF CMP

Step 1: Analysing Local Institutional Potentials to Support the CMP

Objectives:

Key Questions:

How to facilitate the process?

  1. Make a list of all human, natural, material and social resources required of the selected CMP(s).

  2. Use village resource map to identify human, natural, material and social resources available within the village.

  3. Identify the human, natural, material and social resources that are needed to be procured from outside.


  1. Column 1:     MAJOR ACTIVITIES WE MUST UNDERTAKE TO ACHIEVE GOAL

    It is important to encourage people to think about this in a comprehensive way. Whenever we want do something new, we have to start by finding out how to do it - gathering information. There may be alternative ways to do something how do we choose? We have to plan what resources we need and whether we already have them or need to buy them. Maybe this is affected by when we decide to start this activity. We may need to talk to people, arrange metting finance. We may need to get training and all these things may need to be done before we start our chosen activity.

    Follow this same approach as you get the group to plan the activities they will need to undertake to implement this micro project. Example activities might be:

    It may help to brainstorm suggestions on a separate large paper and then sort them into a series of logical steps to be done one after the other. As a facilitator you should be familiar with typical steps for different micro project types and you should suggest any important ones that people have missed and explain why. If people are not used to making budgets, for example, they are unlikely to suggest it and you would need to do so. A list of possible steps is the end.

  2. Column 2:     DETAILED STEPS OF HOW WE WILL DO EACH ACTIVITY

    This column must be very practical and cover all the small, specific steps that are needed to complete a particular activity. For example, to arrange training will involve contacting the relevant technical office, planning how often they should meet, deciding where they should meet; to obtain information may involve a meeting with an expert or visiting another place to look at an example or reading a leaflet; to apply for a grant involves getting an application fa group discussion about the amount to apply for, deciding who will fill the form, organising all the supporting information, etc.

    After completing this column for one major activity, it will be simplest to continue across the remaining columns and then come back to the next activity.

    Example Activity Steps For Community Microproject

    Community Micro project:

    1. Presenting micro project idea to larger community and electing committee which will be in charge.

    2. Obtaining technical advice and selecting system, construction method, guidance for establishing rules regulations for rice bank, etc.

    3. Identifying the best physical location for any proposed development.

    4. Determining what inputs are needed and preparing a detailed time plan for input requirements.

    5. Deciding if inputs can be supplied in kind by the community or must be bought with cash and whether that can be raised locally in each time period.

    6. Working out a management or maintenance plans.

    7. Applying for a grant if additional funds are required.

    8. Organising local materials and starting any physical construction work.

    9. Purchasing inputs not available locally.

    10. Completing the development work and implementing the management and maintenance plans.

    11. Initiating educational programmes to teach people how to use / look after a facility.

    12. Conducting monitoring and evaluation of the project.

  3. Column 3:     WHO IN THE VILLAGE WILL TAKE CHARGE?

    The important feature here is that a member of the group should be named to make sure that each detailed step is accomplished. This column should not contain the name of a government officer. Dialogue and liaison with government staff is essential throughout but the responsibility for ensuring that an activity is completed should rest with a member of the community. However, it is not enough to write the word “village” here because that means anybody and nobody. A specific person should be identified.

  4. Columns 4–5     START AND FINISH DATES

    These must be realistic. The facilitator must get group members to decide exactly when they think they can do something, taking into account seasonal constraints and other commitments. This is very important for community micro projects which require physical labour of the villagers - people must decide what it is practical for them to do. Certain construction activities might only be possible during the dry season.

  5. Column 6     WHAT PHYSICAL INPUTS WILL WE NEED

    This column simply requires a preliminary identification of goods and materials that may be needed. It should not include training which would appear as an activity if appropriate. If materials such as notebooks/building materials/equipment are required then these are listed here.

    Detailed planning of input requirements and costs will be done using the budget plan form during the follow-up community micro project planning meetings.

Community Micro Project Plan

Province/District____________________________ Village: ________________ Community Micro Project:____________________________

Date of Meeting: _________________ Facilitator: ___________________ (Please record names of villagers participating in this meeting)

Goal for this specific Community microproject: _____________________________________________________________________________

MAJOR ACTIVITIES WE MUST UNDERTAKE TO ACHIEVE GOALDETAILED STEPS OF HOW WE WILL DO EACH ACTIVITYWHO IN THE COMMUNITY WILL TAKE CHARGE?START DATEFINISH DATEWHAT PHYSICAL INPUTS WILL WE NEED?
      

Step 2. Finalizing Community Micro project Planning

Objective:

To revise and finalise micro project activity plans with interest groups and undertake more detailed planning regarding input requirements, sources of inputs and maintenance. By the end of this exercise, it should be possible for a group to decide if they need a grant and how much they should apply for.

Method:

Facilitators or technical adviser meets with the community micro project interest group after the village planning workshop and assists them with the detailed micro project planning.

How to facilitate:

The most important aspect is a good organisation by the villagers who should run, contribute and benefit from the community micro project. During this step the Community Micro project Input Requirements and Timing form be completed.

  1. To use this form first work out the most suitable planning period for the project. Will it take one month, three months, six months or some other time period to complete? Will it be affected by the seasons, e.g., there is no point in starting a time plan construction works during the rainy season.

  2. The format has the following columns which need to be filled in: Activity, Activity start, Activity end, Input description, Input Unit, Number of Input Units, Unit costs, Source and Total costs.

  3. The information for the activity, activity start and activity end columns can be taken from the Micro Project Plan format, but should carefully be reviewed as more detailed activities might need to be added here.

  4. Help the villagers to list the input descriptions they will need for their activities in the weeks or months that have been identified. All types of inputs should be listed in the Input column, e.g., tools, notebooks, sand, labour, cement, wood, mud, etc.. Remember these are the physical inputs required, not activities such as training. Manual labour needs to be included here as this is an input.

  5. Typical Input Units include for tools (piece), for roofing (qm2), for sand (qm3), for cement (bag), for labour (working hours) which should be quantified in the Number of Units column.

  6. Then a discussion is needed to determine if items can be supplied in-kind by the people in the community e.g., sand. If so, no cash is required and the column Unit costs and total costs should be left blank for these non cash inputs of the community. Labour provided by the village does not to be costed either.

  7. If cash is required to purchase the item, then the amount should be estimated and entered in the unit costs and total costs column. So if you are discussing a well building project, and shovels are listed in the ITEM column, the first thing to do find out whether people already have shovels that can be used. If they have not, then shave to be purchased and the costs must be entered.

  8. The micro project interest group or committee needs to work its way across all the time periods, using a second sheet if necessary to cover the total period over which the micro project will be implemented.

  9. As discussion takes place, decisions should be recorded in the SOURCE column as to whether the community can find some of the cash required. The source column should either indicate the word village to indicate cash from the village or grant to indicate that a grant is required.

  10. Particular attention needs now to be drawn to the sustainability aspects of the community micro projects. An in depths discussion needs to be hold about how the village plans to organize and operate the micro project in the mid and long run and how they want to maintain the community assets (e.g. infrastructure, equipment, storage for rice bank).

  11. Ask which tasks need to be done every month or two months to keep the facility in good condition. This include cleaning and chlorinating a well, greasing the windlass, repairing cement or brickwork, maintaining a fence around a spring, doing small repair works, weeding the community nursery and so on. These activities need to be added to the Community Micro project Input Requirements and Timing format.

  12. Then it will be possible to work out if anything needs to be bought over a longer time period in order to carry out the maintenance tasks, e.g., grease or paint or a brush or cement. Estimate the price of each item that must be bought and add up the total amount of cash required in each time period. Costs for maintenance must be covered by the village and can not be supported through a grant from FSPR.

  13. Finally it is possible to add up the total costs and work out how much cash is required for the community micro project. Working out contributions in this way is far sounder than guessing at how much people should pay and it also teaches planning skills.

  14. The data on this sheet together with the micro project plan will form the basis of any grant application to the FSPR. It will be possible to see what contributions the community are making both in cash and in kind towards their project and it will be possible to judge the quality of their planning and see when grant

COMMUNITY MICRO PROJECT INPUT REQUIREMENTS AND TIMING

Activities and input requirements during the preparation/development phase and maintenance phase

Activityactivity startactivity endInput descriptionInput UnitNumber of Input UnitsUnit costs (only for cash)SourceTotal costs (Riel)
         
         
         
         
         
         
Description of village contribution to the project (e.g. labour, material, maintenance, cash, farming produce)Names CMP Committee members:Cash Grant required:Total

Step 3: Applying for financial resources to FSPR.

Objective:

To ensure that facilitators, DAs and villagers are aware of the details required to complete a grant application form and how to apply for the financial resources to FSPR.

How to facilitate:

The DO helps the community micro project committee members to fill in the application form and grant agreement form.

The committee members should ask the VDC chairperson to review the proposal and to sign it to indicate that he is in agreement with the grant application. The VDC chairperson should ensure that approved community micro project will be integrated in the village and commune planning processes.

The DO and PO review the proposal and fill in the respective sections of the application form reserved for their

The PO submits the proposal to the national FSPR team for final approval and disbursement of funds.

For every application the following three forms need to be submitted:

  1. APPLICATION FORM FOR COMMUNITY MICROPROJECT GRANT

  2. COMMUNITY MICROPROJECT INPUT REQUIREMENTS AND TIMING

  3. COMMUNITY MICROPROJECT PLAN

Remember: For some CMP types further documentation needs to be attached to the application. Please refer to the criteria listed at the beginning of these guidelines (see: 5. Community Microproject Conditions).

NATIONAL PROGRAMME FOR FOOD SECURITY AND POVERTY REDUCTION

APPLICATION FORM FOR GRANT SUPPORT

1. COMMUNITY MICROPROJECT

Name of Microproject: .......................................................................

Province/District: ..................................................... Village: ......................................................

Application for a grant of Riel ............................ Date received by Provincial team.......................

Community Microproject for which grant is required:

 
 
 
 

Attach a copy of the 1) community microproject plan and 2) the community microproject input requirements and timing plan relating to this project.

How many households will benefit from this micro project? ..........................................

How many belong to the most food insecure group in the village ..........................................

How many people have been involved in the planning process? ..........................................

Summarise community contributions proposed, e.g. materials, labour, input purchasing, organisation and supervision, maintenance

....................................................................................................................................................................

....................................................................................................................................................................

.....................................................................................................................................................................

Summarise the cash requirements ( from the microproject input requirements and timing plan):

MonthTotalCash to be supplied by communityCash required from FSPR
    
    
    
    
Total   

List members of community microproject committee and group that might have been formed to take charge of this project:

NameRole or allocated responsibility
  
  
  
  
  
  

DECLARATION

We declare that the information we have given above and in support of this application is to the best of our knowledge correct. We undertake to ensure this microproject is completed and will supply receipts for all grant funds used to the Agriculture District Office.

Signature of Chairperson: .....................................................................................................

Signature of Secretary: .....................................................................................................

Signature of Treasurer: .....................................................................................................

Date: .........................................................................................................................

To be completed by the VDC Chairperson (if there is no VDC, the village chief should sign this):

I have reviewed the proposal and agree to the grant application.

Signature of VDC chairperson...................................

To be completed by the responsible District Officer:

Appraisal of the experience, skills and ability of this group to implement this project:

 
 
 
 
 
 

Recommended disbursement plan:

MonthAmountMethod (e.g. cash / materials / to whom, etc.)
   
   
   

Name and Signature of District Officer: ______________________________________ Date: _____________________

To be completed by Province Officer:

Comments of the Province Officer:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

I have reviewed the proposal and agree to the grant application.

Name and Signature of Province officer ...................................

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