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The Water and Sanitation Program is an
international partnership for improving water
and sanitation sector policies, practices, and
capacities to serve poor people
April 2009
Field Note
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
Providing Powerful Incentives for Cities
Urban sanitation planning needs to be more than a voluntary activity if it is to be undertaken
nationwide. Government needs to develop both incentives and obligations for municipalities to
adopt comprehensive strategies, by linking funding to the adoption of city-wide sanitation plans.
2
Executive Summary
The government has adopted national sanitation goals but
without a strategy for meeting them in urban areas, and
municipalities have had diffi culty accessing funds should
they decide to make improvements.
The Indonesia Sanitation Sector Development Program
(ISSDP) is an innovative response to the growing sanitation
crisis; instead of funding investments directly, it fosters an
enabling environment for progress, with special attention
to city-level planning, strengthening sector strategy and
institutional arrangements, and advocacy and awareness-
raising at all levels.
This Field Note examines the city-level planning and capacity
building process which is at the heart of ISSDP and is helping
to signal the way forward for sector strategy. Central to the
process are collaboration between the various government
organizations involved in sanitation at municipal level, and
the identifi cation of prioritized, affordable actions that will
enable the cities to move steadily towards effective services,
city wide.
Abbreviations and
Acronyms
Bappeda Local Planning and
Development Unit
CBO Community-based
Organization
CSS City-wide Sanitation Strategy
DKP Cleaning and Landscaping
Agency
DLH Environmental Services
Agency
ISSDP Indonesia Sanitation Sector
Development Program
MDG Millennium Development
Goal
NGO Non-goverment Organization
PDPAL Perusahaan Daerah
Penanganan Air Limbah
(Regional Wastewater
Treatment Enterprise)
PDAM Perusahaan Daerah Air
Minum (Regional Drinking
Water Enterprise)
RT/RW Neighborhood Administrative
Units
RPMJ National Mid-Term
Development Plan
PU Public Works Department
TTPS Tim Teknis Pembangunan
Sanitasi (Sanitation Technical
Team)
WSP-EAP Water and Sanitation
Program - East Asia and the
Pacifi c
Glossary
Cubluk Soak pit
Kelurahan Sub-district (the lowest
administrative unit in a city)
Musrenbang Development planning
meeting
Pokja Working group
Tim Teknis Technical Team
Perda Local Regulation
Barely 1% of the population has access to sewerage and while most
households have a toilet, many of these discharge into open drains and
water courses.
3
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
Introduction
Indonesia is south-east Asia’s biggest
economy and has made an impressive
recovery from the East Asian crisis of the
late 1990s. In 2005 it regained middle
income status and economic growth
since then has averaged 5% per annum.
Alongside this growth comes accelerating
urbanization, and with it the challenge of
developing essential infrastructure and
services. Out of a total population of
230 million, the urban population already
accounts for half and is predicted to
reach 60% by 2025.
While infrastructure generally deteriorated
following the turmoil of the late 1990s,
poor urban sanitation has been a
problem for decades. Government
has treated sanitation as essentially a
private matter and public investments
in sanitation infrastructure and services
have been negligible. The results are
self-evident: barely 1% of the population
has access to sewerage and while most
households have a toilet, in most cases
the wastewater discharges untreated or
partially treated into open drains, canals,
rivers and ponds. Fecal contamination
of urban ground water resources is
widespread, but many people remain
reliant on wells for their drinking water. It
is little wonder that Indonesia continues
to suffer a high incidence of water- and
sanitation-related diseases, including
typhoid.
Solid waste management and drainage
are also grossly inadequate, with huge
quantities of uncollected waste fi nding
its way into drains and watercourses,
causing blockages and exacerbating
problems of local fl ooding.
The Government of Indonesia has
adopted national sanitation goals in
line with the MDGs, but has not, so far,
developed a strategy for meeting them.
And while sanitation services have been
decentralized to local government,
specifi c responsibilities and funding
mechanisms have not been defi ned in
suffi cient detail. As a result, municipalities
are under little pressure to improve
sanitation services and rationalize
institutional arrangements, and do not
know how to access capital funds. Where
improvements are undertaken, they tend
to be piecemeal and unconnected to any
strategic plan for the city as a whole.
Funded by The Netherlands Embassy
through Indonesia Water and Sanitation
Program (WASAP) and Swedish Agency
for International Development (Sida), the
Indonesia Sanitation Sector Development
Program (ISSDP) is a partnership
between the Government of Indonesia
and the World Bank Water and Sanitation
Program (WSP). Implementation has
been assisted by DHV & Associates. It
is an innovative and ambitious response
to the urban sanitation crisis. Instead
of funding new investments directly, it
aims to foster an enabling environment
for progress in the sector, with special
attention to planning, capacity building
and institutional arrangements at city
and provincial level; policy and strategy
at national level; plus advocacy and
awareness-raising at all levels; all geared
towards local ownership of sanitation
challenges and improvements.
At the end of its fi rst, two-year phase,
government ownership of the program,
both at central and local levels, is strong
and a distinct shift is evident in the
sector. Each of the six medium-sized
municipalities supported by the program
has produced a city-wide sanitation
strategy and urban sanitation is starting
to gain the profi le it deserves on the
national development agenda. Central
and provincial governments are now
taking concrete steps to ensure that more
cities begin tackling the urban sanitation
challenge and can access the funds and
technical assistance they need to do it.
This Field Note focuses on the city-level
planning and capacity building process
which is at the heart of ISSDP and is
helping to signal the way forward for
national strategy. Central to the process
are collaboration between the various
government organizations involved in
sanitation at municipal level, and the
identifi cation of prioritized, affordable
actions that will enable the cities to move
steadily towards effective services, city
wide.
Sanitary Conditions in
Indonesian Cities
According to the 2007 World Development
Report, just over half of the Indonesian
population lives below the poverty line of
$2 per day. The Indonesian government
has reported that, in urban areas, only
13% of the population is poor, but this
is based on a threshold of just $0.60 per
day.
While at least half of Indonesia’s 230
million population lives in urban areas,
only 1% of the population is served by
sewerage, and less than ten cities have a
substantial sewerage network. This level
of coverage is among the lowest in Asia.
In the absence of public investments,
most of the infrastructure and services in
place have been provided by households
and small operators. The use of water-
borne toilets is well established in towns
4
and roughly three quarters of urban
households have a toilet. However, local
government oversight and regulation is
weak and very few households dispose
of wastewater safely. Many toilets
are connected to soak pits known as
cubluk, or to septic tanks that are poorly
constructed, rarely emptied, and allow
untreated or partially treated wastewater
to seep into ground water (which is high
in many locations) or into open drains and
watercourses. Other households have
toilets that discharge directly into drains
and water courses via a waste pipe, or
are simple ‘overhung’ latrines whereby a
simple screen or shelter is erected inside
which people defecate directly into the
water.
Septic tank emptying businesses are
common, but many of them dump sludge
directly into rivers without treatment. All
six municipalities participating in ISSDP
have a sludge treatment plant, but these
operate below capacity or not at all, for a
variety of reasons including low demand
and diffi culties with vehicular access.
Some are provided at waste disposal
sites and where these are some distance
from town, the transport costs could
be an additional deterrent to potential
users.
Informal collection of household waste on
payment is well established in Indonesia
but at least one third of urban households
do not receive this service. Even where
waste is collected, large amounts of it are
burnt, disposed of randomly or dumped
at unoffi cial sites that are not serviced
by the municipality. Formal secondary
collection points are too few, as are fi nal
disposal sites. And while sanitary landfi ll
is known, it is not normally practiced.
Many households are located in areas that
do not have proper urban drainage, and
in some towns (including Banjarmasin,
one of the ISSDP cities) there is regular
fl ooding. The presence of large quantities
of sewage and uncollected garbage
exacerbates the problems of already
inadequate drainage networks.
Regular hand washing with soap is
quite rare in Indonesia, although soap
is available in nearly every home. ISSDP
surveys found that around 44% of
respondents in the six cities never wash
their hands with soap.
Inadequate sanitation in both rural
and urban areas has had severe
consequences for health in Indonesia
and impacts most acutely on the poor,
who are least able to compensate for the
lack of government investments in basic
services. One survey found that the poor
urban households were buying water
from private vendors at 15 to 30 times
the tariffs of the public utility (WSP, 2006).
Many of them were unable to obtain
connections to the public supply due to
a lack of formal land tenure and the high
one-time cash costs of connections.
Infant mortality in low-income areas
reached 121 per 1000 in 2001,
compared with an average of 59 for low-
and middle-income countries in the Asia
Pacifi c region, and a high proportion of
deaths was associated with water- and
sanitation-related disease. The incidence
of typhoid is the highest in the region, and
disproportionate for countries achieving
a GDP of over $700 per annum. It is
Indonesia is south-east Asia’s biggest economy and has made an impressive
recovery from the East Asian crisis of the late 1990s. In 2005 it regained
middle income status and economic growth since then has averaged 5%
per annum.
BOX 1: SANITATION BY COMMUNITIES – SANITASI OLEH MASYARAKAT
(SANIMAS) PROGRAM
The SANIMAS program is based on community-driven development principles.
Communities are offered three choices for sanitation improvement:
(i) Shared (communal) septic tanks for groups of four to fi ve households. In this model,
the household has to build its own toilet and connect it to the septic tank;
(ii) Enhanced communal bathing, washing and toilet block (mandi, cuci, kakus or MCK)
facilities including biogas capture and reuse; or
(iii) A shallow sewer leading to a communal sewage treatment facility (usually a baffl ed
reactor). For this option the individual household provides its own toilet and connection
to the sewer.
The option of choice may depend on the specifi c conditions of the respective locations
and other social or cultural preferences. The communities are guided in the selection
of their preferred option. Typically house-owners prefer private facilities connected to a
shallow sewer, and tenants of rental housing prefer the shared toilet block. All of the
options are modular for community sizes of 100 to 200 households.
Each of these options costs
about Rp 3 million ($310)
per household. For a typical
community of 100 households
the Government of Indonesia
grants the local government
Rp100 million ($10,300) or
one third of the cost. The
local government invests the
balance of Rp 200 million
($20,700). The community
invests an equivalent 2–5% (in
‘in kind’ labor) contribution to
build the facilities.
Since 2006 the Ministry of
Public Works has begun
replicating the SANIMAS approach with its own budgets, though long-term operation and
maintenance systems are still to be developed and the technology has yet to be taken
to scale.
5
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
estimated that Indonesia loses some $9
million annually due to poor sanitation;
roughly 2.3% of GDP (WSP, 2007).
Urban Water Supplies
Water resources are plentiful in Indonesia,
but only 42% of households have access
to a public water supply network and
barely one third of urban residents have
access to a house connection from the
public utility (PDAM). Tariffs are well below
cost recovery levels and many utilities
have outstanding loans from the Ministry
of Finance. As a result, maintenance
suffers and in many cases expansion
has been postponed. Water quality from
public networks is often low.
Where an adequate public supply is not
available, households use alternative
supplies such as private dug wells,
tubewells and small local distribution
networks, or buy water from informal
suppliers, some of whom distribute utility
water illegally. In smaller cities, as much
as half of the population accesses water
through these alternative routes. Private
wells are severely contaminated with
fecal bacteria due to the high proximity
of malfunctioning septic tanks or pits
used for human waste disposal. In Blitar
(one of the cities supported by ISSDP)
only 10% of households have access to
a piped water supply and roughly two-
thirds of shallow wells are sited within ten
meters of a septic tank or pit latrine.
Sanitation Policy
and Institutional
Arrangements
For many years, central ministries in
Indonesia exercised almost complete
control over infrastructure planning,
development and fi nancing. Operation
and maintenance, on the other hand,
was assigned to local governments. This
stark separation of responsibilities for
investment and for service delivery did
not foster accountability and capacity
development at local level and, as a
result, the sector experienced declining
technical and fi nancial performance
despite increased capital expenditure
from the late 1990s onwards.
In 2001, the government embarked on
a rapid and far-reaching decentralization
process. This formalized local
government responsibility for the delivery
of urban sanitation services (among other
things) but did not lead to any signifi cant
improvements on the ground. A critical
constraint was that responsibility for
urban services (including sanitation) was
devolved to local government without
establishing an operational framework
and service delivery standards or putting
in place measures to develop municipal
capacity. What exactly municipalities
should do, how they would be held
accountable, and how services should be
funded, were not spelled out. Importantly,
no specifi c obligation was introduced
to improve sanitary conditions in un-
sewered areas, which account for almost
the entire population in most towns and
cities. An added complication was the
failure to defi ne the role of provincial
governments in municipal sanitation.
Since 2006, the provinces have been
allocated an increasing share of national
infrastructure development budgets.
In 2007 this reached 40% of national
spending and partial clarifi cation of
provincial roles was at last issued.
The current allocation of responsibilities
for urban sanitation services is as
follows:
National government is responsible for
sanitation policy and strategy; regulation,
minimum standards and monitoring; and
overall coordination of the sector. The
National Development Planning Agency
(Bappenas), the Ministries of Public
Works, Health, and Home Affairs (the
latter is responsible for local government)
and the Environment Agency all have a
role in urban sanitation, though Bappenas
plays the lead role in decision making.
In contrast to this, responsibility for
promoting rural sanitation lies squarely
with the Ministry of Health.
Provincial governments have not, up
to now, been involved in urban sanitation
services since their roles and
responsibilities in this area have not
been adequately defi ned. The 2001
reorganization established no hierarchical
relationship between provinces and
municipalities, though it did establish that
provincial government has a responsibility
to monitor and enforce national minimum
6
standards including effl uent standards,
and is responsible for trans-boundary
environmental issues such as the control
of river pollution. The need to establish
the role of provincial government is
becoming urgent since the provinces
now receive signifi cant funds from
national government that could be used
for urban sanitation improvements, but
no mechanisms are in place for deploying
them.
Local governments have overall
responsibility for the provision of urban
sanitation services, but the assignment of
specifi c roles to municipal departments
and other city-based agencies varies
greatly from one city to another (see
Table 1). Typically, six to nine offi ces
have a role to play, though as many as 16
are involved in some cities. Quite often,
the solid waste management agency
(Dinas Kebersihan) or the environmental
services agency (Dinas Lingkungan
Hidup) take a lead role, though no
agency has a specifi c responsibility to
promote household toilets. In the case of
sewerage (where it exists) responsibility
may lie with the wastewater management
utility (PDPAL), the water utility (PDAM),
the water resources department (Dinas
Sumber Daya Air), or the department of
public works (Dinas Pekerjaan Umum).
These agencies employ a substantial
number of graduate and postgraduate
staff in larger cities, but expertise in urban
sanitation planning and service delivery is
quite limited.
To improve coordination and collaboration
between these agencies, in 2007 the
Government of Indonesia established a
national multi-departmental sanitation
working group known as Tim Teknis
Pembangunan Sanitasi, headed by
Bappenas. The same group provides
the vehicle for ISSDP support to national
sanitation policy and strategy.
Policy development in the sector has
so far focused on community-based
services, which effectively means rural
and peri-urban sanitation – there is no
policy for urban sanitation. In other words,
the policy framework emphasizes the
role of communities without addressing
issues that need institutional attention.
The government has, however, adopted
national sanitation goals. These include
achieving 75% access to improved
sanitation by 2015 under the National
Action Plan on Sanitation (in line with
the Millennium Development Goals) and
the achievement of open defecation-
free districts and towns by the end
of 2009 under the National Mid-Term
Development Plan (RPMJ). However, no
national strategy or fi nancing plan has
been adopted for achieving these targets
in urban areas.
Urban Sanitation
Finance
Public expenditure in the water and
sanitation sector was growing before
2001 and jumped enormously in the fi rst
two years after decentralization, at both
central and local levels. The emphasis,
however, has been on funding water
supply rather than sanitation. Total
public expenditure on sanitation remains
minimal, at just 0.04% of total public
spending. This refl ects the prevailing
view in government that responsibility
for sanitation investments lies with
householders. In reality, government also
needs to make substantial investments
in primary infrastructure, and it has been
estimated that a tenfold increase in total
sanitation investments would be needed
to meet national sanitation targets and
the MDGs. So far, however, there is no
investment strategy or fi nancing plan for
the sector.
While government clearly needs to
spend more on sanitation infrastructure,
past investments have not always been
cost-effective or sustainable, due to
a failure to establish viable operation
and maintenance or cost recovery
arrangements. For example, more
than 200 fecal sludge treatment plants
were built in the mid-1990s to cater for
the ubiquitous septic tanks, but only
a handful are operational today. This
further illustrates the low priority and
ownership afforded to sanitation by local
government.
In the absence of government guidelines
and regulations, substantial provincial and
local development funds remain unspent.
The World Bank has estimated that this
amounts to $10.3 billion nationally.
It is estimated that a tenfold increase in total sanitation investments would
be needed to meet national sanitation targets and the MDGs.
7
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
For now, municipalities are expected to
fi nance sanitation improvements primarily
from their regular resources, most of
which come from central government,
with a small amount raised locally.
This means that expenditure has to be
projected annually, with little provision
for longer term planning, though multi-
year budgeting is due to be introduced.
Accessing funds held at provincial level
is diffi cult due to the lack of formal
guidance; anti-corruption laws are being
strengthened and offi cials are increasingly
wary of taking risks where no explicit rules
are in place.
A further complication is that water
utilities with foreign currency-dominated
loans were adversely affected in the
Asian fi nancial crisis and many became
bankrupt. As the fi nancial viability of the
utilities has deteriorated, the Ministry of
Finance has become reluctant to lend
for water and sanitation improvements.
Loans are refused if a utility has
outstanding arrears and, as a result,
the largest previous source of capital
fi nancing for the water sector has dried
up for most local governments. This
refl ects a national trend of reducing all
government borrowing, as Indonesia
overstretched itself in the past.
Turning to service users, the willingness
of householders to pay for household
collection of solid waste has been clearly
established, but the same cannot be said
for wastewater treatment and disposal.
A few water utilities include a sewage
component in the water tariff, but only
a minority of households are connected
to the piped supply and tariffs are in
any case very low. The high level of
toilet use shows that people are willing
to pay for the privacy and convenience
of a private facility, but it is not so clear
that these same households would be
willing to make an additional payment
for improvements to ensure safe excreta
disposal by upgrading their installation,
connecting to a sewer, or ensuring
the regular emptying of their tanks by
contractors that practice safe sludge
treatment and disposal. How to promote
and fi nance sewer connections is one of
the practical challenges being addressed
by ISSDP.
Municipal Sanitation
Planning
The focus of development planning at
municipal level is the Local Mid-Term
Development Plan, which has a fi ve-
year vision. This is compiled through a
series of development planning meetings
known as musrenbang, beginning at sub-
district level and continuing via district to
city level. The process is coordinated by
the city planning body (Bappeda) and
the plan provides the framework for
the municipality’s annual activities and
budget. Individual departments also
provide input, and some have their own
BOX 2: FUNDING SOURCES FOR SANITATION SERVICES
Sanitation
Development
National
Development
Budget
Provincial
Development
Budget
District/
Municipal
Development
Budget
Community
& Private
Sector
Householders
Other
Financing
Sanitation services can be developed with various sources of
fi nance. Besides its own municipal budget, the city can access
government and non-government funds. To reach the 2015 targets
of the Millennium Development Goals, Indonesian cities need to
access an additional IDR 4 billion annually from sources other than
municipal budgets.
Sources of
Funds
8
Table 1: Urban sanitation in Indonesia—typical allocation of responsibilities at city level
Local
Policy
and
Strategy
Infrastructure Development and Service Delivery
Sewerage,
Wastewater
Treatment
Sludge
Treatment
Communal
Toilets
SANIMAS (Urban
Community
Sanitation System)
Household
Toilets, Septic
Tanks
Drainage
Local Government
Enterprises
PDPAL (Sewerage Utility)
PDAM (Water Utility)
Municipal Departments
DKP (Cleaning and
Landscaping Agency)
RT/RW (Neighborhood
Administrative Units)
DLH (Environmental
Services Agency)
PU (Public Works)
Other Government
Bodies
Bappeda (Local Planning
and Development Unit)
Non-Government
Stakeholders
Private Sector Pit
emptying
NGOs/communal groups
CBOs
Individuals Tertiary
Abbreviation Institution English Translation
Bappeda Badan Perencanaan dan Pembangunan Daerah Local Planning and Development Unit
PDPAL Perusahaan Daerah Penanganan Air Limbah Regional Wastewater Treatment Enterprise
PDAM Perusahaan Daerah Air Minum Regional Drinking Water Enterprise
DKP Dinas Kebersihan dan Pertamanan Cleaning and Landscaping Agency
RT/RW Rukun Tetangga/ Rukun Warga Neighborhood Administrative Units
DLH Dinas Lingkungan Hidup Environmental Services Agency
PU Pekerjaan Umum Department of Public Works
The low priority afforded urban sanitation by government in the past, and
the absence of a coordinated response to the MDGs, were important
factors in the development of ISSDP.
9
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
strategic plans. These should be related
to the local plan but must also fi t with
sectoral initiatives from line departments
at provincial and national level.
Regulation and
Standards
Legislation and standards relating to
sanitation are also under-developed.
Environmental laws exist to control water
pollution, but enforcement is weak and
polluters see little point in reducing their
impact when the receiving bodies are
polluted anyway, sometimes from distant
sources. Current controls focus more
on the obligations of polluters than on
the management role of public bodies,
though here too there are gaps, not least
a lack of enforceable standards for the
design, construction and maintenance
of household toilets or the treatment of
septic tank waste. Steps are, however,
being taken to address this (see Box 1).
As provincial governments expand
their role in facilitating urban sanitation
improvements, it is likely that many will
adopt a regional regulation on sanitation
within the framework of national service
standards.
ISSDP Rationale,
Goals, Objectives
The low priority afforded urban sanitation
by government in the past, and the
absence of a coordinated response
to the MDGs, were important factors
in the development of ISSDP. The
program is supporting progress at both
implementation and policy level, with
a strong emphasis on collaboration
between agencies within and beyond the
municipality.
The program purpose is: “to establish
a framework for sustainable pro-poor
sanitation services in Indonesia through
effective and coordinated policy-making,
institutional reform, strategic planning
and awareness building”.
BOX 3: MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR URBAN SANITATION SERVICES
The Ministry of Public Works is currently drafting minimum service standards for wastewater,
drainage, and solid waste disposal that local governments will need to meet. Even if they
cannot be met in full in the near future, well-designed standards—which refer to the MDGs—
can assist the development of local sanitation strategies by providing objective benchmarks
for assessing progress. Each city sets its own standards according to its capacity, and an
incremental approach is to be taken.
Type of Service Minimum Service
Standard Indica-
tor
Remarks Target Deadline
Access to Wastewater Collection Infrastructure and Facilities
Provision of
wastewater in-
frastructure and
facilities to meet
public need,
in the form of
private toilets,
communal
toilets or public
toilets
Private or com-
munal or public
toilets available,
equipped with at
least:
-Squat/ sit toilet
bowl
-Goose-neck/
water seal
To meet this
target, commu-
nities must be
open defeca-
tion free
80% service
coverage
2015
(MDG target)
Wastewater
management
using low-
density ( 300
people/ha) on-
site system
In cities: toilets
are connected to
septic tanks with
absorption fi elds.
The distance be-
tween the septic
tank absorption
fi eld and water
well is at least 10
meters
National
Standard (SNI)
03-2398-1991
concerning
Procedures for
Planning Septic
Tanks with
Absorption
Fields
80% service
coverage
2015
Other standards include:
- Wastewater management in low-density (less than 300 people/ha) may use on-site systems
- Off-site systems needed when density is over 300p/ha
- Wastewater management units established at the municipal level and human resources
with competency in sanitation available
- Wastewater service fees cover at least operation and maintenance costs, in keeping with
the principle of cost recovery
- Local guidelines available and need to incorporate communications and public
participation.
10
In Phase I there were four components:
Component 1: Sanitation Enabling
Framework. An enabling framework
developed through strengthened policy,
regulation, institutions, strategies and
action plans. This component was
founded on a series of sector assessments
and thematic studies, the fi ndings of
which would enable the program to build
commitment for, and support, policy and
institutional change.
Component 2: Coordinating framework
for activity and investment in the sanitation
sector developed by government and
agreed with all donors.
Component 3: Public awareness
campaigns for sanitation developed,
promoted and tested, with a focus on
the urban poor. These were to include
targeted promotional campaigns (national
and in selected cities) informed by market
research on demand and supply and
issues in behavior change.
Component 4: Local level capacity
building and development of city-wide,
poor-inclusive sanitation strategies and
pro-poor action plans. To be completed
in six cities and used to inform national
strategy for the sector.
The four components were designed
to operate as somewhat separate, but
mutually supportive and well co-ordinated,
streams of work. They would run
concurrently, with signifi cant interaction
between them. National coordination
was overseen by a steering committee
at the most senior level of government,
under which was the Technical Team for
Sanitation Development (Tim Teknis).
The absence of an infrastructure
construction component made this
program different from conventional
donor-assisted projects, and it took
some time for government partners
to appreciate why it focused on the
‘enabling framework’ – a concept that
cannot be explained in a few words.
Moreover, there was no blueprint for
developing an enabling environment or
a city-wide sanitation strategy, nor had
there been any sustainable programs in
Indonesia that provided an obvious point
of reference. In practice, the program
has evolved as a collaborative process
of investigation, review and planning with
government partners at both national
and local levels, and national strategy
is evolving in a series of steps, not as a
one-off activity.
BOX 4: SUMMARY OF URBAN SANITATION CHALLENGES IN INDONESIA
ISSDP is a vehicle for addressing critical challenges in the sector at all levels. These include:
At national level
• Low political priorities, due to prevalent views on responsibility for sanitation at all levels of government. Sanitation needs to be higher on the
political agenda if it is to get the attention it deserves, and can no longer be regarded as purely a private matter in urban areas.
• The urgent need for a national urban sanitation policy that sets priorities, defi nes institutional and community roles and responsibilities,
establishes a legal and regulatory framework, and facilitates the adoption of comprehensive city-wide sanitation strategies.
• The need for an investment framework and fi nancing strategy, both to increase the total funding available in the sector and to enable those
funds to be deployed effectively.
• The need for advocacy to make the sanitation crisis an issue of national concern.
At provincial level
• The need to clarify the role of the provincial government in the funding of urban infrastructure investments and the planning and delivery of
sanitation services.
• A lack of capacity for sanitation promotion and progress monitoring.
At city level
• A lack of mechanisms for inter-agency collaboration on planning and service delivery, bearing in mind the range of organizations that have
a stake in sanitation.
• A lack of incentives and accountability for the achievement of national sanitation goals. At present, not all municipalities would accept that
there is a big problem with excreta disposal.
• Limited municipal capacity for planning, infrastructure development, service delivery and sanitation promotion.
• Complicated and poorly understood mechanisms for accessing and allocating capital funds.
• An under-developed (and unregulated) role for the private sector in service delivery and maintenance (for example in the safe removal,
treatment and disposal of septic tank sludge).
• Poor operation and maintenance of existing infrastructure.
At community and household level
• Limited appreciation of the need for safe disposal of wastewater, though toilet use is widely practiced.
• Many people occupy land illegally and are excluded from municipal projects and planning processes.
There was no blueprint for developing an enabling environment or a city-
wide sanitation strategy, nor had there been any sustainable programs in
Indonesia that provided an obvious point of reference.
11
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
City Sanitation
Planning under ISSDP
This component is at the heart of
ISSDP and in Phase 1 has focused on
the formulation of city-wide sanitation
strategies in six cities: Surakarta, Jambi,
Payakumbuh, Banjarmasin, Denpasar
and Blitar. Lessons from this experience
are now informing sector policy and
strategy development at national level.
Program support in each city centers on
a city sanitation working group (Pokja),
which includes representatives from the
full range of government agencies and
non-government partners that have
an interest in urban sanitation. It is this
working group that develops the strategy
and is responsible for securing its formal
adoption by city authorities.
ISSDP has tried, through the planning
process, to directly address the
shortcomings of existing sanitation
services in the cities, particularly poor
inter-agency coordination, a history of ad
hoc, supply-driven investments, and a
lack of essential information for decision
making.
Key features of the planning process
include the following:
1. It avoids ‘blueprint’ approaches
to infrastructure development that
treat the city as a blank sheet on
which completely new services can
be imposed. Instead, it starts from
an analysis of what already exists,
then considers how this could
be improved in incremental steps
as funds become available and
municipal capacity grows. Implicit in
this is the recognition that planning
cannot be a one-off event; that
plans must be regularly reviewed an
updated, and approaches modifi ed
in the light of experience. A ‘learning
by doing’ approach is especially
BOX 5: IT’S NOT A PRIVATE MATTER ANYMORE: ADVOCACY AND AWARENESS
CAMPAIGNS
ISSDP efforts to develop an enabling environment for progress in urban sanitation are
supported by a dedicated component dealing with awareness raising and advocacy
at national and local levels. This has included, among other things, the piloting of pro-
poor awareness campaigns and the promotion of hand washing via radio messages.
The pro-poor campaigns were participatory activities carried out at community level
in areas identifi ed as high risk, using visual materials to facilitate refl ection on current
sanitary conditions and the need for action, and to investigate community preferences
for improvements. Some aspects of the Community-Led Total Sanitation approach
– particularly the use of communal shame as a motivating factor – proved to be quite
effective.
During Phase I it was not always easy to get the
timing right for promotional inputs, and ensure
that appropriate, ‘doable’ messages were being
disseminated. An early city-wide trial in Blitar to
promote the upgrading of septic tanks, for
example, proved to be premature because the
program had not yet developed practical
guidelines on making the improvements.
National promotional campaigns were also
designed during Phase I, but implementation
was held back because government strategy
had not yet reached the point where cities
could respond adequately to demand for better
sanitation, should it be generated. Steps were
taken, however, to stimulate public concern over
the urban sanitation crisis, including the production of high quality advocacy material.
One of these was a brochure entitled ‘It’s Not a Private Matter Anymore!’ which used
photos and graphics, and compelling headlines, to spell out the need for action both by
government and communities. The document was targeted at government offi cials and
politicians but also proved popular with the media. Encouraged by the success of the
brochure, ISSDP produced some others including one entitled ‘100 Million Customers
Await You,’ which aimed to increase awareness of the private sector regarding sanitation
business opportunities.
Table 2: Sanitation baseline in the six ISSDP cities
Population Toilet plus
sewer/
septic tank
(%)
Toilet without
safe disposal
(%)
No
toilet
Access to
waste
collection
(%)
Drainage
Coverage
(%)
Denpasar 560,000 46 54 - 23 62
Banjarmasin 600,000 17 83 - 41 17
Surakarta 660,000 57 43 - 89 60
Jambi 450,000 44 56 - 23 49
Payakumbuh 105,000 33 64 3 34 33
Blitar 127,000 24 70 6 34 30
(Source: ISSDP)
12
relevant given that the municipalities
have never before engaged in a long-
term, strategic planning exercise.
2. It pays attention to the institutional
and fi nancial aspects of service
delivery, and to the need for effective
communication with service users
if established behaviors, especially
unsafe excreta disposal, are to be
challenged and modifi ed.
3. Addressing long-standing defi ciencies
in sanitation services is a daunting,
potentially overwhelming task. ISSDP
breaks down a complex planning
process into discrete, manageable
tasks, emphasizing the importance
of sound information for decision
making. At the same time, it recognizes
that some available data may be
incomplete or unreliable, and fi nds a
practical way forward where this is
the case, for example by conducting
sample environmental health risk
assessment surveys in representative
parts of town.
4. The process recognizes the need
both for strategic, city-wide decision
making by local government, and for
active support and engagement at
community level. It thereby optimizes
both aspects in a ‘top-down meets
bottom-up’ approach to planning.
This is consistent with, and linked
to, the government’s annual
development planning process,
whereby development proposals
from neighborhood groups are
collated and prioritized at sub-
municipal tiers and provide the basis
for developing the annual municipal
budget and fi ve-year plans.
The development of a city-wide strategy
begins with an assessment of existing
infrastructure and services in each sub-
district (kelurahan) of the city. This involves
three discrete steps:
Step One: Secondary data analysis
This entails an examination of available
data for each kelurahan, while recognizing
that it may not be complete or reliable.
Three broad types of information are
examined:
The number of households formally
designated as poor, since poverty affects
access to sanitation facilities, bearing
in mind that most services are self-
provided.
Population density. This can have a
strong infl uence on the severity of
sanitary problems and consequently the
health risks.
Technical data on the coverage of water
and sanitation services, and the level of
service provided (shared or household
taps, on-site sanitation or sewerage,
etc.)
A weighting factor is assigned to each of
these parameters.
Step Two: Primary data collection
A participatory survey known as an
environmental health risk assessment
(EHRA) is conducted in sample kelurahan
that have a relatively high proportion of
low-income households. The survey and
observations involve groups of women
from these locations, who make a health
risk assessment of their neighborhood,
with assistance from municipal and
program staff. The assessment considers
the condition of, and access to, water
and sanitation facilities, and establishes
a baseline on hygiene behavior in key
areas such as handwashing with soap,
handling of child waste, and solid
waste management in the home. The
fi ndings enable more accurate targeting
of priority areas and provide insights
into both the impact of poor sanitation
at the household level and potential
improvement strategies.
Step Three: Professional assessment
Members of the city sanitation working
group add their own perception of
public health risk areas based on
their knowledge of the town and their
professional expertise.
BOX 6: EXAMPLE OF PRIORITY AREAS IN BANJARMASIN
HOTEL ARUMHOTEL ARUM
4.06 4. 03
3.09
3.01
4.05 4. 10
4.11
2.07
5.01
2.03
3.06
5.04
2.08
1.12
2.09
5.06
5.07
2.05
4.09
3.04
2.06
5.02
3.03
3.07
3.05
2.02
2.01
1.01
2.04
3.02
4.07
5.09
5.05
5.08
3.08
1.03
5.03
1.05
1.07
1.08
1.11
1.06
1.10
4.08 4. 02
1.02
4.01
1.09
1.04
4.04
1.01
1.02
1.03
1.04
1.05
1.06
1.07
1.08
1.09
1.10
1.11
1.12
2.01
2.02
2.03
2.04
2.05
2.06
2.07
2.08
2.09
3.01
3.02
3.03
3.04
3.05
3.06
3.07
3.08
3.09
4.01
4.02
4.03
4.04
4.05
4.06
4.07
4.08
4.09
4.10
4.11
5.01
5.02
5.03
5.04
5.05
5.06
5.07
5.08
5.09
BANJARMASIN TENGAH
Antasan Be sar
Gadang
Melayu
Kelayan Luar
Kertak Ba ru Ili r
Kertak Ba ru Ulu
Mawa r
Pasar L ama
Pekapuran Lau t
Seberang Mesj id
Sungai Bar u
Teluk Dalam
Alalak Se latan
Alalak Te ngah
Alalak Ut ara
Antasan Ke cil Timur
Kuin Utar a
Pangeran
Sungai Jinga h
Sungai Miai
Surgi Muf ti
Banua Anyar
Karang Mekar
Kebun Bunga
Kuripan
Pekapura n Raya
Pemurus Lua r
Pengambangan
Sungai Bi lu
Sungai Lul ut
Kelayan Bar at
Kelayan Dal am
Kelayan Sel atan
Kelayan Ten gah
Kelayan Ti mur
Mantuil
Muru ng R aya
Pekauman
Pemurus Bar u
Pemurus Dal am
Tanjung Pagar
Basiri h
Belitu ng Selata n
Belitu ng Utara
Kuin Ceruc uk
Kuin Sela tan
Pelambuan
Telaga Bi ru
Telawang
Teluk Ti ram
BANJARMASIN UTARA
BANJARMASIN TI MUR
BANJARMASIN SELATAN
BANJARMASIN BARAT
FINAL KELURAHAN CLASSIFI CATION
Members of the city sanitation working group add their own perception of
public health risk areas based on their knowledge of the town and their
professional expertise.
13
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
BOX 7: WHITE BOOK
The results of sanitation mapping in ISSDP are reported in a document called the White Book. The white books
prepared by six cities involved in ISSDP generally consist of seven chapters. In addition to an introductory chapter, the
chapters generally discuss:
City Overview, which is a brief description of the geographic and topographic characteristics of the city,
administrative districts, current land-use, municipal government structure, the vision and mission of the city, and
demographic and socio-economic conditions.
City Sanitation Status, which describes the condition and level of existing sanitation services (wastewater,
solid waste, drainage system), public health conditions, current and planned sanitation programs and activities,
sanitation-related institutions and regulations, and funding for sanitation.
City Sanitation Problems, which describes problems that have impeded or may impede the development of
sanitation services. These problems may be related to technical or supporting aspects (community participation,
policy and regulation, institution,
non-government involvement,
fi nancing).
Indicative Sanitation Development
Plan, which illustrates a)
sanitation development trends,
needs, and opportunities, and b)
recommendations for intervention.
Identifi cation of Priority
Areas, which identifi es city
wards (kelurahan) prioritized for
sanitation development (see box
on the left).
Summary and Conclusion,
which briefl y describes issues
requiring attention when preparing
the citywide sanitation strategy,
including recommended activities
for sanitation development.
The White Book is usually accompanied
by an executive summary, aimed at
city decision makers. Generally, an
offi cial cover letter signed by a high-
ranking city offi cial is also a part of the
White Book. Payakumbuh Municipality
White Book, for example, is signed by
the mayor.
•
•
•
•
•
•
14
In the last stage of the analysis, the
information gathered is used to produce a
set of maps that divide the city into zones
based on four levels of public health
risks. Priority locations are not always
obvious, partly because poorer residents
are not always found in large clusters;
most neighborhoods contain a range of
income groups. For this reason, ISSDP
does not target the poor as a separate
group, but adopts a ‘poor-inclusive’
approach to planning.
Finally, the information and analysis for
each city is collated in a document which
has become known as the ‘White Book’
(see Box 7) due to the format in which it
was fi rst presented. The books include a
wealth of baseline information on existing
infrastructure and services, budgetary
information and some issues analysis.
The information provides the basis for
formulation of a city-wide strategy to
tackle the problems identifi ed.
A Thorough Approach
Each city-wide sanitation strategy aims
to be a comprehensive document that
addresses sanitation in the broadest
sense, including excreta disposal,
drainage, solid waste management
and hygiene behavior (see Table 3).
In ten volumes it sets out prioritized
plans for infrastructure development
and rehabilitation, but also details how
sanitation services will be operated and
sustained, both physically and fi nancially.
The strategies include medium-term
goals and budgeted annual action plans,
pay particular attention to the needs of
the poor, and emphasize the importance
of user demand and preferences in
service design.
To illustrate the content and scope of the
strategies, Box 4 outlines the outcome
of the planning process in Banjarmasin,
one of the municipalities participating in
the program.
Facilitating the Planning
Process
The program’s approach to technical
assistance was to support and facilitate
the planning process, but not to undertake
it directly. As a result, the time needed to
develop a city sanitation strategy was
not known at the outset. In the event,
it took approximately eighteen months
to produce the fi rst six strategies, but
with a defi ned process now in place, this
timeframe could probably be reduced for
other cities.
While working with the city sanitation
working groups, the program has sought
to integrate sanitation planning with
established government planning and
budgeting cycles so that it is not seen as a
parallel and purely project-related activity,
but part of the routine business of local
government. There is also an emphasis
on making best use of the limited local
resources currently available, rather
than making ‘wish lists’ that cannot be
implemented without a massive injection
of additional funds.
To support the planning process, ISSDP
deployed a full-time city facilitator in each
of the six towns, with administrative
support, for a period of roughly fi fteen
BOX 8: CITY-WIDE SANITATION STRATEGY
1: Sanitation Development Framework
Defi nes the city’s sanitation vision, missions,
goals and strategies. Also discusses
the planning procedures, community
participation principles, involvement of the
private sector and NGOs, and policy on
fi nancing.
1
2: Wastewater Subsector
Development Strategy
3: Solid Waste Subsector
Development Strategy
4: Drainage Subsector
Development Strategy
Explains strategies for
development of facilities and
infrastructure for each subsector.
These volumes also present
priorities, technical solutions,
levels of service and coverage,
roles and responsibilities in
service improvement, and lists of
projects (project digest).
2
3
4
5: Strategies for Sanitation Marketing
and Community Participation
Describes strategies to raise community
awareness, hygiene promotion, and
community participation. The strategies
address the goals and targets for improved
communication, community awareness,
community participation, and gender
mainstreaming in the planning and
management of sanitation services.
5
6: Strategies for Institutional
Strengthening and Capacity Building
Describes strategies to build the capacities
of institutions to support to sanitation
development. This should include
strengthening of the sanitation working
group.
7: Strategies for Enhancing
Private Sector and NGO
Involvement
Describes strategies to engage
private sector and NGOs,
particularly whose active role
and resources are needed for
the development of sanitation
services.
8: Financing Strategies
Explains the strategies for
fi nancing, plans for investment
fi nancing, and for recurrent
costs of sanitation services
development.
10: Monitoring and Evaluation
Strategies
Describes strategies for monitoring
and evaluation of planning and
implementation of sanitation
development activities.
9: Sanitation Action Plan and Financing
Scenario
Describes proposals which are prioritized for
implementation in the coming budget year.
Proposals in the current annual action plan will
be submitted as inputs for preparation of annual
work plans of each related municipal work unit.
6
7
8
10
9
Documenting the citywide
sanitation strategy
Like the sanitation working groups in other cities involved in ISSDP activities, the Jambi sanitation
working group developed a citywide sanitation strategy document comprising ten volumes. The
volumes can be grouped as follows: 1) documents related to the sanitation development framework,
2) documents related to the strategy for sanitation services development, and 3) documents related
to the strategy for development of supporting components. Another document describes the annual
action plan for sanitation development. Below is a description of the ten volumes of Jambi citywide
sanitation strategy document.
While working with the city sanitation working groups, the program has
sought to integrate sanitation planning with established government
planning and budgeting cycles so that it is not seen as a parallel and
purely project-related activity, but part of the routine business of local
government.
15
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
months. In addition, roaming experts
provided guidance and support in
specialist areas such as engineering,
project management, data collection
and assessment, community-based
approaches, capacity development and
fi nance. These were supplemented by a
number of dedicated training events.
Gender in City
Sanitation Planning
From the outset of ISSDP, it was clear
that women in Indonesia are greatly
under-represented in formal planning
and decision-making processes. Few
are invited (or expected) to attend
planning meetings and very few serve
as political representatives or managers
in local government. ISSDP aims to
mainstream gender in its operations, but
there was initially no defi ned strategy for
doing this. Following a comprehensive
review of gender-related aspects of the
program, however, specifi c measures
were adopted for ensuring that ISSDP
responds appropriately to the varying
needs, existing roles and perspectives
of men, women and children in the
cities where it works. For the sanitation
planning process, these include, among
other things:
• Wherever possible, disaggregating
data on sanitary conditions and
services, and any proposed
improvements, to reveal the gender-
related aspects. This means asking
‘who is involved in this?’ whenever
a particular situation or proposal is
under consideration.
• Consulting both men and women on
their concerns and preferences for
sanitation improvements, bearing in
mind that women generally manage
household sanitation while men
decide on household investments.
Progress in this area is being pursued
BOX 9: THE BANJARMASIN CITY-WIDE SANITATION STRATEGY
Banjarmasin is the capital of the province of South Kalimantan and has a population of just
over 600,000. It is known as the ‘city of a thousand rivers’ because of the many waterways
passing through it. This water is tidal and the average level of the town is slightly below
sea level, consequently parts of the town fl ood regularly. Almost 40% of the town has a
high population density (over 175 persons per hectare) and one third of the residents are
formally designated as poor. Most poor residents live in simple, lightweight houses along
the riverbanks, and use the rivers for bathing, laundry, cleaning teeth and defecation.
Roughly 60% of households have a toilet, while 30% use the rivers and 10% use other
options such as public toilets. Household toilets generally have soak pits or septic tanks,
many of which malfunction and are affected by fl ooding. Just 1% of the population has
access to sewerage. In contrast to this, the public water supply network covers 90% of
the city, with 84% of the population served via house connections or public taps. Average
monthly consumption is about 17 m3 per household – a generous amount.
Some two-thirds of the daily production of solid waste is collected and there is an
established system of door-to-door collection by community-based organizations using
handcarts. Some of this waste is later dumped indiscriminately, but the bulk of it is
transported to a fi nal disposal site, though vehicular access is diffi cult.
The situation analysis conducted by the city sanitation working group found that these
conditions arise from a combination of long-established personal behaviors, limited
demand for better sanitation, and inadequate service provision by the municipality.
In its CSS, the Banjarmasin city sanitation working group has identifi ed modest, but realistic,
targets for the 2008-2010 period, in the areas of domestic wastewater disposal (on and
off-site), solid waste management, and local drainage. Principal strategies include:
• encouraging roles for non-government service providers;
• increasing demand for sanitation infrastructure and services through marketing;
• strengthening service delivery capacity;
• expanding infrastructure coverage; and
• expanding the range of technology options available in response to local circumstances
and user preferences.
These strategies are the foundation of a medium-term action plan for the period 2008-
2010. Highlights of the action plan are set out in Annex One.
Of the various components of sanitation, wastewater disposal has the highest profi le in
the plan. This is due partly to the very active role played by the Banjarmasin wastewater
management utility (PDPAL) in the planning process, but also refl ects the diffi culties
faced by the municipality in recent years in identifying improved solid waste management
technologies and systems. Further research and possibly piloting may be needed to
develop viable options that the municipality feels confi dent in adopting at scale.
By October 2008, several of the planned activities were underway including, for
example, preparation of a wastewater master plan, promotion of sewer connections, and
rehabilitation of drainage channels near the city waste disposal site. Other activities were
being tendered, but the working group was also reviewing and revising the action plan to
make a better fi t with the resources available.
16
both within the program and via the
development planning meetings that
shape the annual municipal budget.
• Developing effective strategies for
communicating with men, women
and children in sanitation awareness
campaigns and hygiene promotion
interventions. Some interventions
need to target men specifi cally, for
example to emphasize their need to
practice basic hygiene in the home,
while others will emphasize the role
of women in decision making over
sanitation investments.
• Building gender-sensitive approaches
into the training and orientation of
city facilitators and other extension
workers.
While implementing these measures
at city level, the program is also
investigating whether any formal rules
or processes need to be amended at
higher levels of government to promote
the equitable treatment of men and
women in the development of sanitation
services. There may, for example, be
cases where service providers do not
accept formal applications from female-
headed households. In addition, national
advocacy campaigns spearheaded by
the program are challenging gender
stereotypes via publications and other
mass media initiatives.
A Wake-up Call for
Municipalities
City sanitation strategies are a
milestone
With Phase I of the program completed in
April 2008, all six cities now have a city-
wide sanitation strategy accepted and
signed by the head of the City Planning
Department (Bappeda). Progress beyond
that varies from city to city but in every
case the city sanitation working group is
promoting the CSS to both the political
leadership and operational departments
as a key reference point for city planning
and budgeting. In at least three cases, the
municipality has already made a decision
to use the CSS in development of the
RPJMD, and in one case implementation
of the annual action plan had begun
by September 2008 while concrete
preparations were underway, while in two
others, action plans were being updated
and revised. As of November 2008,
progress in the six cities was as follows:
Inter-agency collaboration is now well
established and there is a strong sense
of ownership of the CSS within the
city sanitation working groups, plus a
clear understanding that planning is an
ongoing process, not a one-off event that
ends with the production of a document.
The CSS provides a framework for action
but a lot of practical details still need to
be worked out (for example, long-term
operation and maintenance arrangements
for decentralized wastewater treatment
plants). This is understandable, however,
given that the working groups are dealing
with long-term neglect and getting to
grips with urban sanitation for the fi rst
time. They have come a long way in two
years from a very low baseline position
in which municipal engagement in urban
sanitation issues was minimal. The
cities now have a rational framework
for action and resource deployment, a
better understanding of current sanitation
problems and are better placed to deal
with them. The value of the planning
process, however, is local ownership
of sanitation problems and solutions,
demonstrated by ongoing implementation
of selected parts of the action plans.
Added value will be realized when the
cities use their updated strategies in
formulation of budgets and funding
proposals for further implementation.
Coordination and collaboration
City-based agencies concerned with
sanitation are now working together
more effectively than before and the level
BOX 10: OVERVIEW OF STATUS AND FUNCTION OF CSS IN LOCAL SETTING
Payakumbuh • CSS included in the RPJMD (local medium term development plan) of
the new mayor and formally adopted by city council in July 2008
Jambi • CSS signed by mayor in April 2008, but is being re-presented to the
new mayor (in November 2008) as an input to the RPJMD
• City sanitation working group currently reviewing and improving action
plans prepared during Phase 1
Banjarmasin • CSS has been adopted by mayor and city council through a mayoral
decree
Denpasar • CSS adopted as a source book by local stakeholder organizations
Blitar • Public consultation undertaken to disseminate and refi ne CSS content;
more consultation and dissemination planned
• Following the public consultation the CSS was signed by the mayor
• CSS to be used in RPJMD preparation (2009-2013)
• 2008 action plan being implemented, fi nanced from the municipal
budget. Municipality seeking provincial and central funding to support
2009 action plan
Surakarta • CSS disseminated to mayor, provincial and municipal organizations,
NGOs and general public
• 2008 action plan is under revision. 2009 plan will be included in the
municipal list of priority programs and budgets of related departments/
agencies
• Provincial government to support activities in four high-risk kelurahan
identifi ed in CSS
• CSS implementation to begin on Global Handwashing Day, October 15,
2008.
The value of the planning process, however, is local ownership of sanitation
problems and solutions, demonstrated by ongoing implementation of
selected parts of the action plans.
17
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
of motivation within the city sanitation
working groups is impressive. Moreover,
this has been achieved without an
injection of capital funds; staff are
realizing the need to take action now,
even if the resources available do not
enable ’ideal’ solutions. The program has
successfully challenged the notion that all
the problems in urban sanitation lie with
the community.
Similarly, it has become clear to both local
and national managers that the problem
in urban sanitation is not only a lack of
investment; it is also the lack of a plan.
Donors are ready to provide funds for
urban sanitation, but up to now there has
been no framework for investment. City-
wide sanitation strategies are important
as they prioritize investment needs,
enabling municipalities to direct incoming
funds (whether from central government,
the province or donors) to where they are
most needed. At national level Bappenas,
and increasingly the Ministry of Public
Works, are convinced of the value of city-
wide sanitation strategies and Bappenas
is already planning to extend the process
to a substantial number of cities beyond
those directly supported by ISSDP. The
second phase of the program will focus
on capacity building at provincial level
with special attention to extending the
municipal planning process to all towns
and cities in the province.
Using the CSS for resource
allocation
One of the strengths of CSS development
is its explicit linkage with municipal
resource allocation processes, though
it proved diffi cult to meet government
deadlines so that sanitation action plans
were included in the 2008 budget (the
strategies were developed in the second
half of 2007 while the 2008 budget
request had to be submitted the previous
August). The profi le of sanitation in local
planning meetings has, however, gone
up substantially since 2006, with much
better participation by communities in
general and women in particular.
Learning by doing: Capacity and
ownership building on the job
ISDDP Phase 1 ended in April 2008
with the production of city sanitation
strategies, and has shown the importance
of process in municipal capacity building;
had the sanitation working groups simply
been given guidelines on writing a plan,
they would not have gained so much
fi rst-hand experience of the issues
to be addressed, or discovered why
innovations such as dialog with service
users and collaborative planning can be
so useful. The mayors of the six cities
have started to see sanitation planning
as an opportunity, as they can say with
confi dence that the strategies refl ect
citizens’ demand.
One city facilitator described ISSDP as a
wake-up call for municipalities, and this
is borne out by the steadily increasing
commitment to action. One senior offi cial
noted that ISSDP is addressing the failure
of previous infrastructure programs,
which have tended to be either huge and
hardware-focused, with poorly targeted
investments, or community-based and
holistic but on too small a scale to make
a signifi cant impact city wide.
All of this is encouraging, but creating
local ownership of the planning process
was slow, and initially diffi cult. At both
national and local levels, it took time for
government offi cials to understand the
purpose of ISSDP, and why the program
was only talking about sanitation rather
than funding investments. There was also
an expectation – based on experience of
previous donor-funded projects – that
the consultants would do everything,
when in fact government partners had
to undertake a considerable amount of
work themselves. At fi rst, city staff saw
little reason to go through the planning
process, bearing in mind that sanitation
was seen as a household responsibility.
The concept of planning as a fl exible,
ongoing process that is responsive to
local circumstances, was also a departure
from established practice and unfamiliar
to most municipal staff.
The frequent turnover of municipal
offi cers was an additional challenge to
the process since it affected continuity.
The absence of overall city development
plans was a further complication, since
the bigger picture into which city-wide
sanitation strategies would fi t was itself
poorly defi ned.
BOX 11: GOVERNMENT UNDERTAKINGS ON SANITATION
Government commitment to urban sanitation has grown steadily during the fi rst two years of
program operation. This commitment was expressed publicly via two declarations, the fi rst at
regional level, the second national.
The Blitar Declaration on Sanitation was signed by the mayors of the six ISSDP-supported
cities during a city summit on sanitation in March 2007. The mayors made a commitment to
accelerate the development of urban sanitation and to adopt and implement action plans in
each city with specifi c goals and targets.
Following on from this, a National Sanitation Commitment was signed by the Ministers of
National Development Planning, Public Works, Health, Home Affairs, Industry and Environment
at the Indonesia Sanitation Summit in November of the same year, with countersignatures
from governors, mayors and district heads. This document recognized the impact of
poor sanitation on health and economic development, and committed the government to
increase the coverage and effectiveness of sanitation services though multi-stakeholder
partnerships between government and non-government organizations, the private sector
and communities.
18
Political support
Securing the active support of city mayors
was an important breakthrough, and was
triggered by their participation in two city
summits at which sanitary conditions
in the six cities were compared, and
progress reviewed. The summits
attracted a lot of media attention and it
became clear that pride, peer pressure
and inter-city competition were powerful
motivating factors. One city was reported
in the press as the dirtiest in Indonesia
and this prompted the mayor to ensure
that his town did not languish at the
bottom of the league table. During the
second city summit, the mayors of the six
cities signed the “The Blitar Declaration”
committing themselves to action on
sanitation. This was followed some time
later by a similar declaration at national
level. In November 2008, a further eight
cities signed the Blitar Declaration.
As the process unfolded, it became clear
that provincial government should also
play a signifi cant role in urban sanitation,
though that role needed to be clarifi ed
and developed. Addressing this will
be one of the principal tasks for ISSDP
Phase II.
Implications for
National Sanitation
Strategy
The national and city level components
of ISSDP are mutually supportive,
with intensive engagement at city level
providing lessons on how the ‘enabling
environment’ for urban sanitation should
be improved at the national level. Some
of the emerging issues to be addressed
are outlined below.
Capacity building and scaling up
• ISSDP is helping to clarify what
municipalities can reasonably
do with the human and fi nancial
resources currently available. As
cities begin implementing action
plans in Phase II, it will become
evident what support they need
in order to make appropriate
and cost-effective technology
choices, run effective promotional
campaigns and develop fi nancially
sustainable services within the
Indonesian planning and budgeting
framework. This information can be
used to inform the development of
appropriate resources for training
and technical support country
wide. This said, ISSDP has already
demonstrated that a very effective
way for municipalities to develop
capacity is to start taking action
on sanitation and learn from their
own experience, though they need
guidance and support in taking the
fi rst steps.
Institutional arrangements
• Indonesia needs a national strategy
for the achievement of urban
sanitation goals, with defi ned
objectives and institutional roles
from national to local level, to
provide a framework for action at
municipal level and to bolster local
political will. The government has
adopted a policy to strengthen
existing institutional mandates with
Bappenas as coordinating and
lead agency (based on a Ministerial
Decree in October 2006). Although
the ensuing WATSAN Steering
Committee has taken time to
establish a regular meeting schedule,
its various working groups have been
operational. Recently the Steering
Committee has been more active,
and in that context the Ministry of
Public Works has now initiated work
on an urban sanitation strategy in
consultation with other ministries.
• Urban sanitation planning needs to
be more than a voluntary activity if
it is to be undertaken nationwide.
Government needs to develop
both incentives and obligations
for municipalities to adopt
comprehensive strategies, by linking
funding to the adoption of city-wide
plans. There are now indications that
central government will introduce
this link.
• There is consensus on the potential
for provincial governments to
facilitate increased action on
sanitation, but this role needs to be
clarifi ed and nurtured.
The summits attracted a lot of media attention and it became clear that
pride, peer pressure and inter-city competition were powerful motivating
factors.
19
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
• As with funding mechanisms,
legislation, standards and other
technical information on urban
sanitation exist at central government
level but are largely unknown at city
level. This again highlights the need
for improved communication within
government.
Sector fi nance
• Government needs to rationalize
and publicize existing funding
mechanisms for urban sanitation.
An important lesson from Phase I
is that funding for urban sanitation
improvements is potentially available
from existing government sources at
all levels, but municipalities do not
know how to access it. Allocations
from central government to provincial
governments have recently been
made for various purposes, but it is
not yet clear how these should be
disbursed. This is a long-standing
dilemma for all sectors and though
the situation is gradually improving,
good communication between the
tiers of government will be essential
if the problem is to be fully resolved.
• Local governments need access to
the multi-year funding essential for
large investment programs. While
this is being discussed by central
government, no fi rm date has been
set for its introduction. Again, this is
a constraint that reaches far beyond
the water and sanitation sector.
• The sector needs a common
government/donor approach based
on a mutually agreed sector fi nancing
strategy and investment framework,
which is broader than a single
ministry’s plan.
• A sanitation donor group has met
regularly since mid-2007 to improve
coordination and collaboration.
This is working well and the group
is developing terms of reference for
development of a sanitation fi nancing
and investment framework, with the
government. Until the government
has developed an urban sanitation
strategy, however, an investment
framework will have little effect, and
may not be fully ‘owned’ by all of the
concerned ministries.
Challenges Ahead
For its fi nal year, the focus of ISSDP
support will be on four areas:
1. Consolidating activity in the fi rst six
cities and helping them move from
planning to implementation.
2. Developing the role of provincial
government in three provinces
and expanding the program to an
additional two to three cities in each
one.
3. Developing a national urban
sanitation strategy.
4. Adopting a sector fi nancing strategy
and investment framework.
For the city level work, the critical test will
be whether the program leads to more,
and better targeted, investments in urban
sanitation, and improved service delivery.
It is encouraging, therefore, that the new
mayors in ISSDP cities have responded
positively to the CSS and indicated
a willingness to adopt the strategies
even when these were developed
under a previous administration. There
may nevertheless be a risk of ad hoc
activity by municipal offi cials or elected
representatives anxious to see some
visible progress after all the planning and
ground work.
The lack of capital funding from ISSDP
remains a concern for some offi cials,
but it is again encouraging that some
of the cities have already secured some
short-term funds, enabling them to
begin implementation and show that the
planning process has been worthwhile.
Enabling cities to access existing
government resources is a critical task
for Phase II, though limited pilot funds,
for relatively small-scale works, will
also be available from the Netherlands-
funded World Bank Trust Fund which
fi nanced ISSDP. Unless it is clear that a
range of funds is available from domestic
or external sources, it may be diffi cult to
motivate other municipalities to develop
city-wide plans.
A further challenge is to institutionalize
sanitation planning and coordination.
While city sanitation working groups have
played a central role in Phase I, they are
committees, not institutions, and there is
a risk that the parent organizations (which
control staff and budgets) will adopt a
‘business as usual’ stance irrespective
of the CSS. How this is resolved may
vary from city to city, but one option is
to ensure that the role of the working
group in coordinating city sanitation
services is formalized, and that members
are suffi ciently senior to take strategic
20
decisions. (There has been tendency
for busy managers to delegate relatively
junior staff to participate in the working
group, which creates a risk that any
decisions taken will not carry weight in
the municipality). An additional measure
under consideration is for working
groups to appoint their own, full-time,
consultants to take on some of the roles
that were played by ISSDP teams during
Phase I.
For government to take on this ‘city-
based planning’ approach it will be
necessary for the roles currently played
by consultants to be funded from local or
provincial sources.
One important area that has yet to
be addressed is securing sustainable
operation and maintenance
arrangements for sanitation services.
Some cities envisage a major expansion
of decentralized wastewater treatment
plants, for which asset ownership
is currently unclear; in the existing
schemes, the plants were nominally put
under community management yet the
supporting NGO retained responsibility
for operation and maintenance for an
initial period. The ability and willingness
of communities to sustain these facilities
varies from place to place, but generally
they do not deal with major maintenance
and repairs. More work is needed to
explore the scope for local private sector
and neighborhood organizations taking
on maintenance responsibility, though
asset ownership must fi rst be clarifi ed.
Looking beyond the six cities, a pivotal
question is whether, and how, city-wide
sanitation planning can be adopted more
widely, bearing in mind that there is no
obligation to do so at present. There are
encouraging signs here, as the Ministry
of Public Works has informally indicated
its intention to use the CSS as the basis
for funding allocations to the six Phase
I cities. This could provide a powerful
incentive for other cities to develop their
own strategies. The extent to which
the CSS process is replicable will also
need to be determined, however. City
facilitators have played a pivotal role in
guiding the planning process, which is
detailed and at times complex, and in
building local interest and commitment.
Finding staff with the appropriate skills
has not been easy, and in the short term
could limit the scope for scaling up the
CSS process province wide. The fact that
skilled facilitators with a suitable technical
background cannot simply be recruited
‘off the shelf’ is a refl ection of the under-
development of the sanitation sector and
the need to allocate suffi cient time for
facilitator training and capacity building in
Phase II is a key lesson learned.
Now that the planning process has been
refi ned and a planning manual can be
produced, CSS formulation might be
completed faster in the next batch of
towns. Nevertheless there will probably
be a need for hands-on support, and
possibly some simplifi cation of the
planning process. ISSDP is already
making a start by developing training of
trainers programs for city facilitators, and
trying to identify one or more institutions
that could serve as a long-term training
resource for the sector.
Conclusion
There are many ways to develop a
city-wide sanitation strategy and the
process used in ISSDP is only one. The
strategies developed are not perfect
and local stakeholders understand
that that there are still some diffi cult
questions to address and practical
details to work out. The real value of the
program, however, lies not so much in
the quality of the strategy documents
– which will in any case be revised and
updated periodically – as in the fact that
the municipalities are making a serious
attempt to address a long-neglected
issue of critical importance to public
health, and are approaching the problem
systematically, as a collaborative effort
by the many stakeholders involved. The
level of ownership of the strategies within
the city sanitation working groups is high,
and central government has realized the
importance of comprehensive planning.
Not only that, it has acknowledged the
need for strategic action at national level,
especially on sector fi nancing. Sanitation
is not a private matter anymore, and
this is an important step forward for the
sector.
The value of the program lies not so much in the quality of the strategy
documents as in the fact that the municipalities are making a serious
attempt to address a long-neglected issue of critical importance to public
health, and are approaching the problem systematically, as a collaborative
effort by the many stakeholders involved.
21
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
Select Bibliography
BAPPENAS with WSP-EAP (2007) It’s Not a Private Matter Anymore. Government of Indonesia, Jakarta.
ISSDP (2007) National Analysis of Sanitation Supply and Potential Demand in Six Indonesian Cities. Unpublished report.
ISSDP (2008) Capacity Building for Urban Sanitation Development, Main Report: Framework for city based urban sanitation
planning. Unpublished report.
ISSDP (2008) Capacity Building for Urban Sanitation Development, Background Report 1, Sanitation Governance: institutional,
fi nancial and legal aspects. Unpublished report.
ISSDP (2008) Implementation of ISSDP Phase 1 and lessons learned. Unpublished report.
Kelompok Kerja Sanitasi, Banjarmasin with ISSDP (2007) Draft White Book – Banjarmasin, Executive Summary. Unpublished
report.
Kelompok Kerja Sanitasi, Blitar with ISSDP (2007) White Book 2007 – Kota Blitar, Executive Summary. Unpublished report.
Mukherjee, N. (2006) Voices of the Poor: Making Services Work for the Poor in Indonesia, World Bank / INDOPOV, Jakarta.
World Bank (2004) Indonesia, Averting an Infrastructure Crisis: A Framework for Policy and Action. World Bank, Jakarta.
WSP-EAP (2007) Economic Impacts of Sanitation in South-East Asia, Summary. World Bank, Jakarta.
WSP-EAP (2006), Review of Public Financing for Water supply and Sanitation in Indonesia, World Bank, Jakarta.
22
Annex One: Banjarmasin Sanitation Action Plan 2008-2010
ACTIVITY 2008 2009 2010
Cross-cutting Issues
Sanitation marketing Sanitation awareness building
Media gathering
Campaign to promote cleanliness
and a healthy life style
Campaign to promote cleanliness
and a healthy life style
Campaign to promote
cleanliness and a healthy life
style
Advocacy targeting local
government institutions
Advocacy targeting the local
legislative body
Advocacy targeting the
private sector
Enhancement of the role of the
private sector and communities
Sanitation competition for
neighborhoods, schools and
institutions
Sanitation competition for
neighborhoods, schools and
institutions
Institutional strengthening Review of building permit regulation.
Establishment of operational
guidelines for environmental
and urban planning, commercial
districts, and street vendors.
Establishment and capacity
building of community self-help
groups
Establishment and capacity building
of community self-help groups
Establishment and capacity
building of community self-
help groups
Strengthening the city sanitation
group’s operational mechanisms
and development of its
coordination capacity
Establishment of a municipal center
for sanitation information
Monitoring and evaluation Monev for planning and
implementation of sanitation
development
Monev for planning,
implementation, and impact
assessment of sanitation
development
Domestic Wastewater
Sanitation marketing Dissemination of domestic
wastewater regulations and tariffs.
Promotion of service connections
Dissemination of communal
wastewater regulations re. small-
scale (home) industries
Enhancement of the role of the
private sector and communities
Increase the capacity of
construction workers.
Enabling market access for
compost produced by NGOs and
community self-help groups
Dissemination and capacity
building on domestic
wastewater treatment
23
Urban Sanitation in Indonesia:
Planning for Progress
ACTIVITY 2008 2009 2010
Cross-cutting Issues
Installation of infrastructure Preparation of a master plan
for wastewater and a detailed
engineering design for a sludge
treatment plant
Preparation of detailed engineering
design
Preparation of detailed
engineering design
Procurement and installation of
collection sewer pipes.
Installation of service connections.
Construction of communal
wastewater treatment plant
Procurement and installation of
primary sewer pipes.
Installation of service connections.
Construction of communal
wastewater treatment plant
Installation of service
connections.
Construction of communal
wastewater treatment plant
Development of a domestic
wastewater data base
Strengthening of regulation Effectuating a policy of free house
connections
Effectuating a policy of free house
connections
75% subsidy on house
connections
Strengthening of policies Preparation of a policy to stimulate
cooperation in solid waste
management
Socialization of a solid waste
management policy
Implementation of technical
solutions
Development of appropriate solid
waste management technologies
Local Drainage
Implementation of technical
solutions
River normalization River normalization River normalization
Rehabilitation of drainage channels Rehabilitation of drainage channels Rehabilitation of drainage
channels
Institutional strengthening Review of the work load and
capacity of the municipal
settlements and infrastructure unit
Assignment of the task to clean
tertiary drainage channels to
the municipal settlements and
infrastructure unit
Monitoring and evaluation Reorganization and integration of
drainage monitoring and evaluation
data collected by the municipal
settlements and infrastructure unit
ABOUT THE SERIES:
WSP Field Notes describe and analyze projects and activities in water
and sanitation that provide lessons for sector leaders, administrators, and
individuals tackling the water and sanitation challenges in urban and rural
areas. The criteria for selection of stories included in this series are large-
scale impact, demonstrable sustainability, good cost recovery, replicable
conditions, and leadership.
The fi ndings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed are those of the authors and should not be attributed to The World
Bank, to its affi liated organizations, or to members of its Board of Executive Directors or the companies they represent.
East Asia and the Pacifi c
Indonesia Stock Exchange Building
Tower 2, 13th Floor
Jl. Jend. Sudirman Kav. 52-53
Jakarta 12190
Indonesia
Phone: (62-21) 5299 3003
Fax: (62-21) 5299 3004
E-mail: wspeap@worldbank.org
Website : http://www.wsp.org
April 2009
WSP MISSION:
To help the poor gain sustained access to improved
water and sanitation services.
WSP FUNDING PARTNERS:
The governments of Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada,
Denmark, France, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands,
Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom,
the United States of America, the United Nations
Development Programme, The World Bank, and the Bill
and Melinda Gates Foundation.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS:
This document was developed for WSP-EAP by Jeremy
Colin with C. Keetelaar, N.T. Utomo, and I.C. Blackett.
Special thanks are due to Josef Sinarko Wibowo, Eri
Trinurini Adhi, Richard Thobias Daniel, Renan Jusal
Indra, Achdiat Antono, Dang Uro Winara, Amrizal Amir,
Wita Purwasih, Avianti Zulaicha, Andre Kuncoroyekti, Rik
Dierx, and Menno Oppermann for valuable inputs. We
are grateful to peer reviewers Eddy Perez, Glenn Pearce-
Oroz, Kevin Taylor, Reini Siregar, Jaap van der Velden,
Syarif Puradimadja and Jan Oomen. This Field Note is
also available at http://www.wsp.org.
Photo credits: ISSDP, Qipra Galang Kualita, WSP-EAP