The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has launched the Local Capacity for Local Solutions (LC4LS) Project, which builds the capacity of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) working in critical sectors in 10 eastern and southern Caribbean countries.
The project was launched in Guyana this month.
The project is being implemented in Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, St. Kitts and Nevis, Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago, Suriname, and Guyana in collaboration with the Caribbean Policy Development Centre (CPDC) and the University of the West Indies School of Continuing Studies.
LC4LS will strengthen the managerial, organisational, and administrative capacities of NGOs working in the areas of youth and citizen security, HIV and AIDS, and environmental resilience, as well as those that address poverty alleviation, economic empowerment and work with marginalised populations.
United States Ambassador to Guyana, Perry Holloway, told participants attending the project launch that over the past five years the eastern and southern Caribbean region had seen an expansion of civil society organisations working in advocacy and delivering key services at the community level.
Indicating that the US Government was pleased to continue its long history of supporting regional governments, he contended: “This U.S. Embassy-supported $8 million dollar initiative represents an on-going partnership with Guyana and nine other countries of the eastern and southern Caribbean. It also demonstrates our collective commitment to promote more resilient and prosperous communities in which government and civil society work hand in hand to develop sustainable solutions to the region’s most pressing challenges.”
USAID Mission Director for the Eastern and Southern Caribbean, Christopher Cushing, told the audience that the USAID project will provide workshops, trainings, and customised technical assistance in advocacy, strategic planning, financial management, institutional governance, resource mobilisation, communications, and other areas.
He added that scholarships will be offered for online accredited courses in non-profit management and grants provided to select NGOs to support organisational improvements.
Cushing noted that select peer-to-peer learning and networking opportunities will also be created to enable NGOs to connect and share information with each other, as well as with potential donors, the private sector, government agencies, and academic institutions across the region.
The LC4LS Project represents an example of USAID Administrator Mark Green’s push to ensure that USAID programmes are best supporting a country’s journey to self-reliance by implementing solutions to their own development challenges.
I am represnting attending the four days training representing an regional organization and the only Vincentian at the workshop.