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Monday, May 5, 2025

RIC director: Less complaints against WASA

by

Shaliza Hassanali
2196 days ago
20190430
RIC Executive Director Dr James Lee Young

RIC Executive Director Dr James Lee Young

ABRAHAM DIAZ

In the height of the dry sea­son where some com­mu­ni­ties have been suf­fer­ing for wa­ter, the Reg­u­lat­ed In­dus­tries Com­mis­sion (RIC) has record­ed few­er com­plaints from the Wa­ter and Sew­er­age Au­thor­i­ty (WASA) cus­tomers about its de­liv­ery of ser­vice and in­ad­e­quate wa­ter sup­ply.

Con­fir­ma­tion came yes­ter­day from ex­ec­u­tive di­rec­tor of the RIC Dr James Lee Young dur­ing an in­ter­view with Guardian Me­dia as UNC ac­tivist De­vant Ma­haraj in a What­sapp mes­sage to the me­dia called on cus­tomers of WASA in Cen­tral and South, who have not been re­ceiv­ing wa­ter in their taps for weeks, to boy­cott pay­ing the State-owned wa­ter com­pa­ny..

The RIC is a statu­to­ry body that reg­u­lates wa­ter, waste wa­ter and elec­tric­i­ty sec­tors and is re­spon­si­ble for pro­tect­ing con­sumers’ in­ter­est while at the same time en­sur­ing that ser­vice providers have ad­e­quate re­sources to pro­vide the high­est qual­i­ty of ser­vice to cus­tomers.

Lee Young ad­mit­ted that the num­ber of over­all com­plaints the RIC has been re­ceiv­ing from WASA’s cus­tomers about not re­ceiv­ing wa­ter reg­u­lar­ly and its lev­el of ser­vice has been de­clin­ing.

On av­er­age, the RIC re­ceives be­tween 180 to 200 com­plaints month­ly. How­ev­er, in Jan­u­ary they re­ceived 170 com­plaints. Feb­ru­ary 198 and March 128.

“Well over 50 to 60 per cent of the com­plaints re­late to in­ter­rup­tion in pipe-born sup­ply while 20 per cent re­lates to re­quests for truck-borne sup­ply,” Lee Young said.

“We have seen a re­duc­tion in the num­ber of com­plaints. A very sig­nif­i­cant re­duc­tion of com­plaints in March this year com­pared to the same pe­ri­od last year.”

WASA has 400,000 plus res­i­den­tial cus­tomers in its data­base.

The com­plaints, Lee Young said, have been fluc­tu­at­ing de­pend­ing on the time of year.

He at­trib­uted the de­cline in re­ports to a num­ber of fac­tors.

“One was that it could just be noise in the sta­tis­tics. It could just be an anom­aly.”

Be­fore a com­plaint is reg­is­tered with the RIC, he said a re­port would have to be made to WASA by the cus­tomer.

“The the­o­ry that is be­ing ad­vanced is that we know there are a num­ber of is­sues with WASA’s cus­tomer care cen­tre with the time they take to an­swer calls.”

In a nut­shell, Lee Young said there was a feel­ing by cus­tomers that WASA’s ser­vice to the pub­lic has been de­clin­ing.

“It’s pos­si­ble that WASA’s sys­tem is so swamped now with peo­ple call­ing for re­lief in this bad dry sea­son and com­plain­ing about lack of wa­ter that their re­sources are over­whelmed and they are not an­swer­ing calls as they should be. And the knock-on ef­fect is that peo­ple are not mak­ing any com­plaints.”

Lee Young said in the cur­rent en­vi­ron­ment, cus­tomers would feel “ex­treme­ly frus­trat­ed and ag­griev­ed. There is noth­ing worst than to pay for a ser­vice and not get it...whether it is wa­ter or what­ev­er it may be. So if you are hooked up to WASA’s sys­tem when you get wa­ter or not it is ir­rel­e­vant as far as the billing is con­cerned.”

He said it was un­fair for WASA’s cus­tomers to pay for wa­ter and not re­ceive it in their taps.

“I think it is not fair for any­one in this coun­try, giv­en our lev­el of de­vel­op­ment, that they should be go­ing with­out wa­ter. There should be a re­li­able source of wa­ter for every cit­i­zen in the coun­try.”

To pay for some­thing you do not get, Lee Young said, was the na­ture of the WASA’s leg­is­la­tion and their method of charg­ing.

“The RIC is an en­ti­ty that can on­ly op­er­ate with­in the man­date of the leg­is­la­tion.”

The cur­rent prob­lems at WASA, Lee Young said had not de­vel­oped overnight.

“There is no me­ter­ing. Less than four per cent of the res­i­den­tial pop­u­la­tion has me­ters. So wa­ter is charged at a fixed rate.”

In ad­di­tion, he said the pub­lic has not been in­cen­tivised to con­serve wa­ter.

Lee Young agreed that the pub­lic’s mind­set has to change in the way they use and man­age their wa­ter.

He said res­i­den­tial cus­tomers are charged $1.75 for 220 gal­lons of wa­ter which they “mis­use and waste” with­out a con­science.

The last time WASA im­posed new rates was 1993.

“The rev­enues at WASA is not match­ing up.”

There has been sig­nif­i­cant amount of un­der­in­vest­ment over the years. Those two prob­lems have left WASA in a po­si­tion to ill-man­age the sup­ply.”

What re­course is there for cus­tomers who pay for wa­ter but do not re­ceive any?

“In the first in­stance, they need to get wa­ter so they can make a re­quest for pipe borne sup­ply. And that is what the re­course needs to be in terms of fi­nan­cial rec­om­pense which is prob­a­bly not a great deal,” Lee Young said.

Can the RIC man­date WASA to re­bate pay­ing cus­tomers who are not sup­plied wa­ter?

Lee Young said: “I would have to check on that. I can’t an­swer that off the top of my head.”

Re­bates, Lee Young said, are giv­en to T&TEC cus­tomers whose ap­pli­ances may mal­func­tion dur­ing an elec­tri­cal surge or drop.

He said WASA’s rates were sig­nif­i­cant­ly cheap­er com­pared to our Caribbean coun­ter­parts, with Suri­name hav­ing the cheap­est rates.

In Sep­tem­ber 2017, the RIC start­ed a con­sul­ta­tion for wa­ter and elec­tric­i­ty rate re­views.

Last year, Lee Young said the util­i­ties were un­able to pro­vide the RIC with in­for­ma­tion they need­ed to com­plete this ex­er­cise.

He ad­mit­ted that the RIC had been stalled with this process.

Once the in­for­ma­tion is sup­plied, the RIC’s job, Lee Young said would be to set new rates and not en­force them.

“There­after, it is en­tire­ly up to the util­i­ties and its share­hold­ers with what they want to do. We could set the rates and it may not even hap­pen.”


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