As Desalcott’s water production halted yesterday as it undergoes 16-day scheduled maintenance to prepare for next year’s dry season, some 500,000 residents of south and central Trinidad will now have to find other means of procuring a supply.
However, for residents of Tenant Branch Trace #1 in Woodland, the shutdown has added to an already volatile water issue over 20 years in the making.
The residents said the irregular supply of water to the area has prevented them from filling their tanks to take them through the shutdown period.
The road meanders through the rural hillside in south Trinidad, which for residents is the main contributor to their insufficient and irregular supply of water. They said the incline hinders the flow of water from reaching them.
Councillor for the area, Doodnath Mayhroo blamed an ineffective Water and Sewerage Authority (WASA) booster station and inadequate infrastructure.
“The booster station in Thick Village needs to be repaired and the lines need to be changed. They (WASA) cannot raise the pressure to reach the people on the hill here. These people have problems every single day. They on a schedule and if they do not get on that scheduled date then they have missed it and go to the next week,” Mayhroo said.
Asked if the corporation would be implementing any measures to assist the residents, councillor Mayhroo said, “The amount of trucks we have, we are unable to adequately supply every single household with a truck bourne supply of water. Our trucks are mainly really to supply like churches, temples, schools and if there’s an emergency somewhere.”
A resident of the area for the past 25 years, Ingrid Sookdeo said she has been experiencing the problem since she moved to the area.
“We always have to call WASA...we used to get truck bourne long ago (but) not anymore. Sometimes three weeks, four weeks we have to be calling,” she said
But when the area would receive a water supply, she said, it was not enough to fill her water tanks. The shutdown of the plant now exasperates her concerns.
“We didn’t get any to full (or) save then. We didn’t get any water for the past two weeks so everything is almost empty. How we go survive?”
To cope with the inadequate water supply, she and other residents have affixed pipes from their rain spouts to their tanks.
Bebe Deopersad, 84, lives alone further down the road and won’t be able to move any water catchment devices to perform her daily routines.
Since the announcement of the shutdown, WASA has stated they would be putting measures in place to provide water to areas affected by increasing production and re-distribution of supply from the Caroni and Navet Water Treatment Plants, implementing temporary supply schedules, ensuring capacity storage at critical service reservoirs, increasing water trucking capacity, and placing special emphasis and arrangements to supply schools, health institutions, homes for aged and other special needs organisations.