31 Magar Families in Khotang Finally Get Clean Water Through Nepal's Growing 'One House, One Tap' Push
A new water supply project in Salle, Halesi Tuwachung Municipality has brought clean drinking water to 31 Magar families, ending years of struggle with shortages through a lifting-based system supported by the Gorkha Welfare Trust.
For 31 Magar families in Salle, Halesi Tuwachung Municipality-9 of Khotang, clean drinking water is no longer a daily struggle. A new One House, One Tap project has delivered household access to safe water, giving the community a long-awaited solution to a persistent shortage.
The project was completed with financial and technical support from the Gorkha Welfare Trust and uses lifting technology to bring water to homes in the area. Local residents, who previously had to cope with difficulty accessing clean water, now have a more reliable supply right at their doorstep.
A practical fix for a long-running problem
Water scarcity has long affected parts of Khotang, including areas within Halesi Tuwachung Municipality, where households have faced repeated shortages and difficult access conditions. The new tap connection program directly addresses that challenge by shifting water access from a shared, burdensome system to individual household points.
For families in Salle, this is more than a convenience. It is a basic service that can improve hygiene, reduce time spent fetching water, and strengthen everyday living conditions in a rural community.
How the project works
The system relies on lifting technology, which is especially useful in locations where gravity-fed water solutions are not enough. By using this approach, the project can transport water to the settlement and distribute it through taps installed at each house.
That technical detail matters because terrain is often one of the biggest barriers to water access in Nepal's hill regions. In places like Khotang, engineering solutions such as lifting systems can make the difference between a temporary fix and a dependable water network.
Why the project matters locally
The arrival of clean water can have a visible impact on daily life. Families no longer need to rely on difficult or inconsistent collection methods, and the community gains a more stable foundation for health and sanitation.
Projects like this also show how targeted support from organizations such as the Gorkha Welfare Trust can help remote settlements solve problems that have remained unresolved for years. In this case, the result is immediate and tangible: 31 households now have cleaner, easier access to drinking water.
A small project with a big public impact
While the scale of the initiative is limited to one community, its significance is substantial. Rural water access remains a critical issue in many parts of Nepal, and household tap programs are increasingly seen as an effective way to improve living standards where infrastructure has lagged.
For Salle's Magar families, the change is simple but transformative. A long-standing shortage has been replaced by a practical water supply system that brings clean drinking water directly home.