John,
I am not sure what you are trying to say, but to help you understand 
“Microgrants” I can explain some of them to you.

I am helping the WAMM (West African Motorbike Mappers) who are in Sierra Leone. 
The lead for this was Ivan Gayton from Medicins sans Frontieres and Rupert Alan 
(A regular attendee at The London Missing Maps Mapathons). 
https://africamotorcyclemapping.org/category/rupert-allan-consultant/

They have supplied equipment and are training local people to travel around 
Sierra Leone (at present they are working their way through the Eastern 
Province and they have completed Kailahun District and almost completed Kenema 
District) visiting every town, village, hamlet and isolated dwellings taking 
gps readings to supply coordinates for the names of each of these places, with 
data such as the presence of a water pump, local market and health facilities. 
They download this information onto a spreadsheet and I have been checking 
their work and adding these names and data to OSM. This field work is 
continuing with local people even though Rupert has moved on to Uganda 
https://africamotorcyclemapping.org/2017/11/11/exciting-new-job-motorcycle-mapping-refugee-settlements-uganda/
 and Ivan is in Tanzania with Rumani Huria.

Another that I have been involved in is Janet Chapman (also an attendee at the 
London Missing Maps Mapathons)  with Crowd2Map  in Tanzania where she is 
training the local people to draw the maps themselves and add more information 
and detail with local knowledge. Along with the help of the Crowdsource 
community they have done an amazing job of helping to add to the basic 
infrastructure of Northern Tanzania https://crowd2map.wordpress.com/  

These projects have gained a foothold in very poor areas where technology is 
nowhere near as advanced as you are used to, they have started the process and 
they are quite keen to keep the momentum going. The result will be a dedicated 
group in each country that will continue the work, train more local people and 
expand the mapping community. Even Katmandu Living Labs was a small group in 
the beginning.

And for your information Rebecca Firth is another one who attended the London 
Missing Maps Mapathons. So Mapathons are a valuable way of finding people who 
are prepared to get more involved and actively improve OSM locally and 
elsewhere and not just about bad mappers. It is well worth the effort even 
though many attendees do not return or even continue mapping. 


Sent from Mail for Windows 10

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