Everything you need to know.

Women for Women Relay 2024

July 12-13, 2024

Training Starts : April 1, 2024

The Race

Join a relay team of 6-8 women for this amazing 24-hour relay. Relay teams will conquer 6K relay legs from sunrise to sunrise to fund gender-based WASH programs to break the cycles of poverty for women and girls worldwide.

  


The Need

Holding women and girls back prevents communities and entire countries from breaking the cycle of extreme poverty. The global water crisis affects girls and women the most. In fact, collectively, they spend an estimated 200 million hours hauling water every day—hours they can’t spend getting an education, learning a skill, or earning an income. Girls are hurt by harmful cultural norms and traditions, including female genital mutilation (FGM), forced child marriage, and early pregnancy. Every minute, 22 girls under the age of 18 are married, and this number is rising due to impacts of COVID-19 as families see few options beyond the bride price they can get for their daughters. In emergencies and crises, women and girls in poverty are more vulnerable. Refugee contexts, conflicts, and the current global hunger crisis result in an increase in gender-based violence and child marriages. 


The Challenge

From sunrise to sunrise, relay teams of 6-8 women will take on 6k legs with a goal of each participant raising $10,000. We know that raising $10,000 can sound scary but we believe that you can do it. We have specialized fundraising resources and coaches to help make this a reality. $10,000 = clean water for 200 women and girls. Multiply that by 100 team members and we can raise over $1,000,000 and provide water to approximately 20,000 women and girls globally!

A girl growing up in poverty faces greater challenges from the moment she’s born. In the areas where World Vision works, half the health clinics don’t have clean water, putting mother and new baby at risk. A girl’s home might not have accessible water, which means she’ll have to walk — sometimes for hours — to get water that’s most likely dirty, hours she can’t spend going to school or learning a skill. When a girl becomes a woman and wants to provide for herself and her family, she will face more barriers to accessing technology, credit and economic opportunity. World Vision’s Strong Women Strong World® believes that these barriers preventing women and girls from life in all its fullness can be overcome.

A tangible demonstration of this belief is their multi-faceted program approach called Beyond Access. By intentionally designing water, economic empowerment, and microfinance activities to build upon each other, they nurture women’s confidence and skills to address systemic barriers to their participation and agency. It creates a supportive environment that strengthens female participation, creates opportunities for women and girls to learn and use skills, and increases resiliency and growth for generational impact. They work side by side with all community members to foster equitable participation, ownership, and decision making for community transformation. The goal of Beyond Access is for women and girls to know and experience their self-worth, the ability to make their own choices, and the right to influence social change for themselves and others.

 


The Impact 

Clean water is a problem for which there is a solution. World Vision is one of the leading organizations bringing clean/safe water to communities in a sustainable way and provides more clean water than any nongovernmental organization in the world. In it's inaugural year, W4W 2023 raised nearly $700,000, fully funding the implementation of water and sanitation into two health clinics with maternity wards in Ghana, as well as other projects globally. Water changes everything for women. It isn't a solution to poverty, but water is a gateway to health, hope, and opportunity for women that is otherwise absent. 

2023 Ghana Project 1

2023 Ghana Project 2

 

How World Vision Works:

Bringing Water, Sanitation & Hygiene (WASH)

 

At World Vision we believe that every child deserves clean water. It's the essential building block of life that allows children and their communities to survive and flourish. Our community-based approach gives us deep roots in the community, while our more than 60-year history gives us the longevity and experience to take quality, sustainable interventions to scale.  

World Vision has been working in water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) for more than 50 years, starting in the 1960s primarily with small water projects in individual communities. We gained much experience in the subsequent decades, including a significant scale-up through the West Africa Water Initiative – a large public-private partnership, where World Vision served as the lead non-governmental organization. In 2010, World Vision made a strategic decision to scale up its investment in WASH, making an increased, targeted investment in WASH in 12 countries with high WASH need – ten in Africa, one in Latin America, and one in Asia. Because of this strategic investment, over the last 5 years we have reached more that 7 million people with water, sanitation and hygiene, specifically providing safe drinking water to more than 5.5 million people.

The ultimate goal of all of World Vision’s work is child well-being. Child well-being at World Vision is defined by the following four targets:

  1. Children enjoy good health.
  2. Children are educated for life.
  3. Children experience the love of God and their neighbors
  4. Children are cared for, protected and participating.

World Vision believes that sustainable well-being is impossible without sustainable, equitable access to clean water, dignified sanitation and appropriate hygiene behaviors.

In our clean water work, we strive to provide access to clean water as close as possible to households -- with a maximum of 30 minutes round trip. We build water points in partnership with communities, and we work to ensure that water points are locally managed through water committees. Those committees ensure that water user fees are collected to maintain and repair the well. 

World Vision works to provide environmentally sustainable solutions to water access, using solar water pumping technology wherever possible to provide access to clean water using renewable energy sources. We also work to ensure water is kept clean from the source to the point of use, ensuring community members have the knowledge and resources necessary to collect, treat and use their water safety to protect them from drinking contaminated water. 

Below are some of the water projects that run in harmony with our other key areas of development: health, education, food, and economic development. This approach tackles the root causes of poverty, enabling children to experience fullness of life.

Drill Rigs

These trucks traverse great distances to drill up to hundreds of feet underground to tap into water aquifers.

Wells

Hand pumps in the middle of a community allow water to be generated without electricity.

Solar Pumps

Panels generate energy from the sun to pull water from pumps, up into storage tanks, which allows gravity to feed water to various communities.

Pipelines

Pipelines transport water from access points and allow for water distribution across hundreds of miles.

Rain Catchments

Roofs and other kinds of catchments collect rainwater into a storage tank for treatment and distribution.

Water Kiosks

From catching rainwater to receiving water from pumps or pipelines, community members fill up jugs for a small cost.

Latrines & Handwashing

Sanitation and hygiene are promoted by community leaders and practiced with ventilated, improved latrines and handwashing stations.

Repair Mechanics

Local technicians and members of the Water Users Assoc. are elected to maintain water projects for long-term sustainability.

 


Training Plans

Click the links below to access our training plans:

Advanced Training Plan | Intermediate Training Plan | Walking Training Plan

 


Travel

Airports

You can fly into Santa Barbara or any LA Based Airport (then drive or take the train to Santa Barbara). You will not need a car when in Santa Barbara, the city is very walkable or you can grab a Lyft or Uber.

Ground Transport

From any airport: rent a car, Uber/Lyft, carpool

From DTLA or Burbank: Amtrak Pacific Surfliner

From LAX: FlyAway Bus to Grand Central Station, then take Amtrak Pacific Surfliner to Santa Barbara

Airport Shuttles

TWV will offer shuttles to and from Los Angeles (LAX) & Santa Barbara (SBA) airports at the following times. Please book your flights accordingly.  *Times are tentative and may change based on volume of flights.

Arrival:

Wednesday from LAX: 9:45 am, 10:45 am, 12:30 pm, 3:45 pm, 5:00 pm

Wednesday from SBA: 11:30 am, 5:30 pm

Thursday from SBA: 12:15 pm, 3:45 pm

Departure:

Sunday to LAX: 8:00 am, 9:30 am, 11:00 am

Sunday to SBA: 8:00 am, 1:00 pm

 


 

Event Weekend

 Hotel Information:

Coming soon!

 

Schedule:

Wednesday, July 10th

Travel Day & Check-In

Welcome Reception 5:30 pm

Thursday, July 11th

Team Devo & Shake Out Run

Team Dinner

Friday, July 12th - RACE DAY!

Race Start 5:45 am

Saturday, July 13th

Race Finish 5:45 am

Post Race Happy Hour Celebration 4:30 pm

For questions, please reach out to Lyndsey Deane Ratchford.