John Sauer works as Communications Director for Water Advocates in Washington, DC. His work focuses on the development and implementation of communications strategies to increase US support and action - in both the private and public sectors - for worldwide access to safe, affordable, and sustainable drinking water and adequate sanitation. John's work involves a coordinated effort among major media outlets and a variety or partners to build understanding regarding the importance of water and sanitation as the world’s most under recognized global public health problem. John draws on his wide-ranging work experience and excellent people skills to provide practical solutions to complex problems.

John has worked as a program manager with several international humanitarian organizations over the last 15 years. His responsibilities ranged from managing water and sanitation projects in Uganda to developing an emergency aid program for street children in St. Petersburg, Russia. Prior to Water Advocates, John worked with Action Against Hunger for close to eight years both in the field and in the development and communications department. His most recent position with AAH was as Communications Manager in the New York headquarters, tasked with overseeing an expanding program of press and media relations, volunteer management, and national campaigns, such as Restaurants Against Hunger.

John graduated from Fordham University in 1992 and also holds a Master's degree in International and Intercultural Management from the School for International Training in Brattleboro, VT.

Blog Entries by John Sauer

Finding the Toilet in Stockholm

Posted August 27, 2008 | 02:56 PM (EST)


Last week a mix of water and sanitation experts gathered for World Water Week in Stockholm, Sweden to mull over the world's biggest public health crisis. The problem is that not enough people paid attention.

Each year over 2 million deaths could be prevented with improvements related to...

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A Different Kind of Water Torture

Posted July 18, 2008 | 04:00 PM (EST)


Each day in developing countries more children die unnecessarily from water-related diseases than there are people in my hometown on Long Island, NY. Around 4,000 children per day or 1.5 million per year die from an age-old form of water torture known as diarrhea.

Sometimes I imagine this: the entire...

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Everyday Should Be World Water Day

2 Comments | Posted March 21, 2008 | 06:52 PM (EST)


Diseases associated with water and sanitation continue to cause thousands of preventable deaths each day. About 135,000 children die each month, a disaster by anyone's standards. It is an interesting phenomenon that society pays attention to a natural disaster -- like an earthquake or a tsunami -- far differently than...

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An Ignored Buffett Investment

Posted October 30, 2007 | 04:09 PM (EST)


With last week's news about more sanctions on Iran, the fires in California, and the start of the World Series, it's no surprise that there was scant coverage of Howard G. Buffet's $150 million commitment to alleviate the water crisis in East and West Africa and Central America. (Howard is...

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Media and Water Don't Mix

Posted August 28, 2007 | 01:53 PM (EST)


Last week, Stockholm hosted the most important yearly meeting to discuss the world's largest public health crisis. No, this was not the planning meeting for World AIDS Day, nor was it a global malaria conference. It was World Water Week -- the biggest meeting outside the World Water Forum,...

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