KAHHOBACO Strategic Plan 2026–2030
Building Healthier, Empowered, and Sustainable Communities
A Note from Our Team
For more than twenty years, KAHHOBACO has worked side by side with the people of Kasulu. We have seen the daily realities that families face, from preventable diseases and limited educational opportunities to the steady loss of forest cover as households search for firewood. But we have also witnessed something equally real: the quiet determination of communities that refuse to be defined by their circumstances. This five-year plan is our response to that spirit. It is not a document written in isolation. It has been shaped by conversations with mothers, farmers, youth leaders, health workers, and local officials who know exactly what their neighbourhoods need.
Over the next five years, we are committing to reach five thousand households with clean cookstoves, train more than five hundred young people and women in practical skills, protect families from rabies and malaria, and support local entrepreneurs so they can build businesses that last. Beyond the numbers, our true aim is to walk alongside communities as they take the lead in their own development. If this vision speaks to you, we would be glad to explore how we might work together.
Our Year-by-Year Roadmap
We have designed this plan to build steadily, year after year, so that each phase strengthens the next. The table below outlines how our focus will shift from establishing strong foundations to scaling impact, engaging policymakers, and ultimately leaving behind programs that can sustain themselves.
Year | Guiding Theme | Health Initiatives | Environmental Initiatives | Education & Livelihood Initiatives | Key Milestones |
2026 |
Consolidation & Baseline | We will expand targeted rabies vaccination campaigns and strengthen reproductive, maternal, neonatal, and child health services across our target wards. | We will distribute three hundred and eighty fuel-efficient cookstoves to vulnerable households and launch hands-on training for local artisans who will build and maintain these stoves. |
We will scale our Stitching the Future vocational program for young women and pilot entrepreneurship grants for youth and women in Kasulu and Kakonko. |
We will collect comprehensive baseline data across all programs and establish transparent community feedback systems. |
2027 |
Local Production & Integration | One health initiatives. We will enhance paediatric outreach and integrate practical livestock health education into farmer cooperatives, recognizing the close connection between animal and human wellbeing. |
We will commission two to three community-managed stove manufacturing centres to create local jobs and reduce reliance on outside suppliers. |
We will expand vocational training to include metalwork and basic digital literacy, and we will support grant recipients as they transition into functioning micro-enterprises. |
We will publish our first Integrated Impact Report, sharing both data and community stories to guide our next steps. |
2028 |
Regional Expansion & Systems Strengthening | We will partner with district clinics to replicate our rabies and malaria prevention programs in neighbouring wards, while training and deploying additional community health volunteers. |
We will scale clean cookstove distribution to one thousand five hundred households and pilot larger institutional stoves in five to ten schools and health facilities. | We will broaden our entrepreneurship grants, formalize mental health outreach in schools and faith settings, and support the formation of artisan and women-led cooperatives. |
We will conduct a thorough mid-term evaluation to measure progress, identify challenges, and adjust our approach before the final phase. |
Year | Guiding Theme | Health Initiatives | Environmental Initiatives | Education & Livelihood Initiatives | Key Milestones |
2029 |
Policy Engagement & Strategic Partnerships | We will advocate for district and regional government to integrate our successful maternal, child, and livestock health programs into official public health plans, and we will expand our work into two additional districts. | We will formalize co-funding agreements with local government and private sector partners to sustain stove production, and we will explore whether carbon credit mechanisms could generate additional community revenue. |
We will scale our training programs to reach more than two hundred beneficiaries annually, align our curricula with district development plans, and strengthen cooperative market linkages. |
We will document measurable reductions in respiratory illnesses, deforestation rates, and household poverty, and we will share those findings in policy briefs for local decision-makers. |
2030 |
Sustainability & National Replication | We will work to sustain rabies vaccination coverage above eighty-five percent in target communities, and we will collaborate with regional health authorities to formally incorporate our community clinic model into local health strategies. | We will reach our goal of five thousand households equipped with clean cookstoves, and we will help establish Kasulu as a recognized regional hub for affordable, locally produced clean energy solutions. |
We will celebrate training more than five hundred women and youth cumulatively, and we will support stove enterprises and grant alumni networks to operate without ongoing external subsidies. |
We will publish a National Replication Model Report and host a multi-stakeholder knowledge-sharing forum so other organizations and government bodies can learn from our experience. |
The Five Pillars Guiding Our Work
Our programs are organized around five interconnected areas. Each pillar supports the others, and together they form a complete approach to community development.
Strategic Pillar | What We Focus On | How We Implement It | The Change We Hope to See |
Health & Wellbeing |
We focus on rabies prevention, malaria control, maternal and child health, livestock care, and strengthening community health networks. | We carry out mass dog vaccination campaigns, distribute insecticide-treated bed nets, provide reproductive and maternal health services, train community health volunteers, and teach farmers how to keep their livestock healthy. | We aim to see a measurable drop in preventable diseases, healthier mothers and children, stronger local health response systems, and communities that can access basic care without traveling long distances. |
Environmental Sustainability |
We concentrate on clean energy access, local cookstove manufacturing, deforestation reduction, and climate resilience. | We distribute fuel-efficient stoves, train local artisans to produce and repair them, pilot larger institutional stoves for schools and clinics, and teach practical climate adaptation strategies. | We expect to see fewer trees cut down for firewood, cleaner air inside homes, lower household fuel expenses, and families that are better prepared for changing weather patterns. |
Education & Empowerment |
We centre our work on vocational training, mental health support, life skills development, and reproductive health education. | We run our flagship Stitching the Future program, add training in metalwork and digital literacy, host mental health seminars in schools and churches, and provide family planning education. | We hope to see higher youth employment rates, improved mental wellbeing among young people, greater confidence in daily life, and young women and men who can make informed decisions about their health and futures. |
Economic Resilience & Livelihoods |
We focus on entrepreneurship, micro-enterprise development, cooperative formation, market linkages, and financial inclusion. | We provide seed grants, offer business development mentoring, help groups form cooperatives, introduce village savings and loan models, and teach practical financial management. | We aim to see steady growth in household income, the creation of sustainable small businesses, better access to regional markets, and families who can plan for the future without living in constant financial uncertainty. |
Strategic Pillar | What We Focus On | How We Implement It | The Change We Hope to See |
Institutional Capacity & Partnerships |
We invest in organizational strength, community ownership, strategic alliances, and thoughtful policy engagement. | We provide ongoing staff training, maintain open community feedback channels, build respectful partnerships with government and donors, and advocate for policies that protect grassroots initiatives. | We expect to see a financially sustainable organization, genuine community leadership over programs, supportive local policies, and development models that can be adapted and scaled across the country. |
How We Track Progress and Stay Accountable
We believe that good intentions must be paired with honest measurement and open communication. The table below outlines exactly how we will monitor our work, who is responsible for each step, and what we will deliver to the public and our partners.
Monitoring Activity | When It Happens | What We Will Deliver | Who Leads It |
Baseline Data Collection | Second and third quarters of 2026 | A comprehensive baseline report covering health, environment, education, and livelihood indicators | Our Monitoring & Evaluation Officer working alongside all program teams |
Quarterly Community Feedback | Every three months throughout the five years | Summary reports of household visits, suggestion box responses, and program adjustments made based on community input |
Community Liaison Officers and field coordinators |
Annual Integrated Impact Report | First quarter of each following year | A public report combining quantitative data, financial summaries, and real stories from program participants | Executive Director and the Monitoring & Evaluation Team |
Mid-Term Independent Evaluation | Second and third quarters of 2028 | A strategic review report with clear recommendations on what to continue, change, or strengthen | An external evaluator working closely with our Board of Directors |
Final Comprehensive Evaluation | Fourth quarter of 2030 | A National Replication Model Report and a detailed sustainability plan for continuing the work beyond this cycle | An external evaluation team in partnership with government and donor representatives |
The Targets We Are Working Toward
We have set clear, measurable goals so that we can track our progress openly and hold ourselves accountable. The table below shows where we are starting, what we aim to achieve by the middle of the plan, and where we hope to be by the end of 2030.
Indicator | Starting Point (2026) | Mid-Plan Target (2028) | End-of-Plan Target (2030) |
Households using clean cookstoves | Three hundred and eighty households | One thousand five hundred households | Five thousand households |
Youth and women completing vocational training |
Initial annual cohort | More than two hundred participants per year | More than five hundred participants cumulatively |
Rabies vaccination coverage in target areas | Current baseline rate | Seventy percent coverage | Sustained coverage above eighty-five percent |
Community-run stove manufacturing centres | Zero centres operating | Two to three centres fully operational | Five or more financially self-sustaining centres |
Entrepreneurship grant recipients | Pilot group of early applicants | More than fifty grants awarded annually | More than one hundred fifty cumulative recipients |
Artisan and women-led cooperatives | No formal cooperatives | Five to ten cooperatives established | Fifteen or more cooperatives operating profitably |
Institutional stoves installed in public facilities | Zero installations | Five to ten schools or clinics equipped | Twenty-five or more schools and health facilities equipped |
Districts actively served by our programs | Kasulu and Kakonko districts | Kasulu, Kakonko, plus at least one additional district | Five or more districts implementing scaled programs |
How We Work with Others
KAHHOBACO has never believed in working in isolation. Every partnership we build is grounded in mutual respect, shared goals, and clear expectations. The table below outlines the types of partners we work with, what they bring to the table, and what we commit to giving in return.
Partner Category | Who We Work With | What They Contribute | What We Commit To |
Local Government | Kasulu District Council and Kigoma Regional Health Management Team | Policy alignment, coordination support, technical guidance, and potential co-funding | Timely reporting, alignment with district development plans, and sharing our program capacity with public teams |
International Donors & Foundations | Addax & Oryx Foundation and other committed funding partners | Flexible financial support, technical expertise, and networking opportunities | Transparent financial reporting, honest impact documentation, and careful stewardship of all entrusted resources |
Faith-Based Networks | Anglican Church of Tanzania and Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Newport, Rhode Island, USA | Prayer support, community advocacy, volunteer mobilization, and moral guidance |
Spiritual accountability, protection of community trust, and programming that reflects shared ethical values |
Civil Society & Community Groups | Local NGOs, youth associations, women’s groups, and artisan cooperatives | Grassroots knowledge, implementation support, and community mobilization | Inclusive participation in decision-making, ongoing capacity building, and ensuring credit and ownership remain with the communities |
Private Sector & Local Businesses | Stove suppliers, market distributors, and socially responsible companies | Co-funding, in-kind materials, market access, and innovative business approaches | Clear communication, mutual benefit agreements, and a strict commitment to keeping community wellbeing above commercial interests |
Our Promise to You
When you choose to support Kasulu Health Home Based Care Organization (KAHHOBACO), whether through funding, partnership, or prayer, you are placing trust in our team. We take that responsibility seriously. We promise to be honest about what is working and what is not, because real progress requires both celebration and course correction. We promise to keep listening to the communities we serve, so that programs remain grounded in local reality rather than outside assumptions. We promise to manage every resource with care, backed by clear financial controls and independent audits. And we promise to stay present for the long term, even when the work becomes difficult, because sustainable change does not happen on a short timeline. This is our word to you, and we intend to keep it.
Join Us in This Work
If you have read this far and feel moved to be part of this journey, we would be deeply grateful for your involvement. You can support this work financially, and even a modest contribution helps purchase bed nets, fund a training session, or provide seed capital for a young entrepreneur. You can partner with us by bringing your professional skills, institutional resources, or network connections to strengthen our programs. You can share our mission with others, because awareness often opens doors that we cannot reach on our own. You can pray for our team and the communities we serve, if that is part of your practice. And you can simply stay connected by subscribing to our updates, where we will share real stories from real people, not just reports and statistics. We would love to hear from you.