Gangaram, Betsy Ground residents opt out of GWI service

Despite complaints of poor water quality from their current arrangement, residents within the communities of Betsy Ground and Gangaram, Region Six have opted out of receiving potable water from the Guyana Water Incorporated (GWI).

This was the general consensus related to Susan Rodrigues, Minister within the Ministry of Housing and Water during a meeting with residents on Tuesday.  A release from the Central Housing and Planning Authority said that the meeting was a follow-up on behalf President Irfaan Ali, as residents bemoaned the situation during his regional outreach last week.

Currently the areas are served by a well which comes under the Rose Hall Sugar Estate, and residents are not billed for their water supply. While, a fraction previously indicated their interest in GWI service they have now chosen to keep the current arrangement in place.

“Nevertheless, I offered two interventions: one I will contact the estate to see how we can get them to improve the level of service and the quality of the water there; and secondly we offered through GWI to go into the community to service and repair all of the leaks and the distribution lines,” the Minister said, according to the release.

Rodrigues added, “that should help to improve the level of service and the quality of the water they are receiving but that is as much as we can do at this point”.

GWI has since visited the community and began the necessary repairs. Rodrigues in her statement noted that the she will continue to engage the estate on the matter.

As part of her engagement on Tuesday, the release said that Rodrigues also met with residents of New Forest, East Canje. New Forest is a farming community that has been without water and electricity for decades. The Ministry and the Regional Democratic Council have worked together to ensure that potable water is delivered twice weekly to each household.