Shalini A

@shalini

Joined on Feb 12, 2020

  • NUMUN FUND SEED, GROW & SUSTAIN GRANT FULL APPLICATION FORM Thank you for responding to the invitation to submit a full application for the Seed, Grow and Sustain grant. Your initial submission has been longlisted after an initial prioritisation process by the Numun Fund team, and this form is the full application form for the grant. This will be reviewed by a community-led selection committee. You can find out more about decision-making process, as well as the committee, on our website here. The form contains FOUR (4) parts. The questions are intended to give the community-led selection committee a better sense about how you are organising, who you work with, what is your idea of change, and the kinds of resources you are seeking and might also be able to offer to the community. Some of these questions may be repeats of the ones you have responded to before in the initial submission, and we appreciate your patience for filling this in again as the group reading this form will not be reading the previous one you submitted. The community-led selection committee are not the same people who did the longlisting, and as such, will not have read what you submitted before. Please feel free to copy and paste from your previous submission, or take the opportunity to provide more information to give us a better sense of who you are. All applications are read with the assumption that English is not the first language of the applicant. Note that all questions marked with asterisks (*) are required. We ask that you please read the questions and instructions carefully. Please be mindful of word limits and select responses you are to provide (e.g. based on the grant type you are applying for), so that the information you provide is clear.
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  • Please answer the following questions briefly and submit the final narrative report no later than the 2021 date stated in your contract. Please limit your report to a maximum of  8-10 pages. If you want to send any additional information attach it as appendices. Please note that the approved final narrative report may be shared and read by our donors as part of our reporting purposes. A. Administrative information Name of Organisation: Servelots Infotech Pvt Ltd Title of Project: 2021 LocNet Communty Networks: Servicing the COW Agreement #: SG2021/65/LocNet Type of Grant:
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  • Call with Deepak - scheduled 8th Sep 22 - Dinesh, Shalini, Bhanu(if willing). Dinesh send message to Bhanu Dinesh to contact Renu - Farm, Raghu Stall Ideas - for the 10/11th Festival @craftcenter 48% - Dinesh to contact Ranjani APC narrative report Numun application PT - 20th Sep GST - 20th Sep To CGS - ROC fee & KYC fee
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  • Towards a narrative report While the city, the town and the villages where we work shutdown and we started working from home, a number of activities intensified. We switched to daily online team meetings at a regular hour that is convinient to all and this helped us being connected and to share and listen to each other. We soon noticed we and our friends were all very busy with many webinars on many topics of interest. Months have gone by by now staying home online and reflecting on activities of the past year and the future. The lockdown was overnight and drastic in India. The announced lockdown was for a few weeks initially (later came to be called "lockdown stage 1"), not unlike in other places around the world. As it extended to stage 2, there was considerable panic among the daily wage and short term contractual job seekers. India became know for stories of "reverse migrants" walking hundreds to thousands of miles home as all carriage of personal was disallowed. Work at our craft center and the village came to a halt as the master crafts people had returned to their home towns just days before the lockdown. Its eight months now and still there is no sign of normalcy at the craft center. Villagers who have small land holdings are less affected as over the weeks the farm produce could reach the near by towns. Most other needs were served by large companies, often international ones such as Amazon, and food deliveries such as Swiggy. The effect of this is that most of the small producers have shut shop even after eight months of the Pandemic. The community radio setup in the village had stopped just before the lockdown as our young radio jockeys eloped one day - while "express yourself" we had said, we had to be sensitive to the families and the village. We thank APC for the much needed contingency support, that helped us attend to some of the following activities - in particular those that required support thanks to lockdown, from relief to community network activities.
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  • Request Medha to briefly update on their sessions with Garima Girls. Discuss: (i) introduce concept of browser and how to manage sharing between mobile and laptop locally. (ii) later introduce apps for mobiles and laptops (iii) Use on our annotation app - PAPAD How Medha and Janastu see their roles on collaborate working. Update on the Webinar PI. Discussion further plans on collaboration based on results from point 2.
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  • [TOC] Surveyed Data All our field survey data is archived here, a short summary for each village is shared below. https://files.janastu.org/s/JEf7EHpBd4GE4TD Amini Village Total girls -7 min age 19 and max age 21 6- tailoring
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  • Covid Stories Why have you taken the risk to come here? The Corono virus panic was all over world. And in India, the first case was identified at the end of Janauary. Slowly when the panic was building up in the country and we at Janastu were planning field travel to the villages in Uttar Pradesh in the month of march for our new project. Team of 8 were planned for the trip. Our tickets were booked and all other arrangements were done. When the cases were increasing and first death was reported in the country and the state we were residing, the fear of travel started and slowly the team were dropping from the travel plan. By the time of travel date only 2 person decided to travel considering the need of social distancing and avoid visiting in groups to the villages. We carried our necessary safety kits and flew. Flight seemed to be fully packed. Although we could see people wearing masks but no social distance norms were followed. We reached UP. We met people, interacted with villagers, youngsters. Our project inception travel was going good, then people ask this question. Why have you taken all the risk to come here? The interesting one when they realized we hailed from Bengaluru, there was mixed reaction. One ofcourse the growing covid cases and Bengaluru is the happening and rich city. Whatever it is they were happy to share their space and time and we enjoyed their hospitality. Now it was the time the Indian government announced one day Janata curfew and there were talks about country going into lockdown. We decided to come back to Bengaluru. We reached. Curfew happened and immediately lockdown was annouced. [Radio Image] Although there was a bizzare start of lockdown, Janastu explored ways to engage the team and work. Team started working from home and unsure of when we could physically travel again. Team meetings were happening and it was fun. This was something new and everyday it happened with guests or just team and catchup with lockdown issues and plan followup activities. We tried different opensource video conferencing tool like jitsi,nextcloud talks, 8x8.vc,classmeet. Lockdown has been miserable for many migrant workers, craftspeople and daily wage earners. We focused on collecting stories and tools to help archive them.
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