 |
|
George
Morris
|
| |
A call has come from
an official of the Nevis Water Department to the Nevis
public, to take note of their water consumption and
conserve the resource.
Mr. George Morris, Acting Manager of the government
owned utility made the appeal on Monday when he confirmed
that Nevis had been experiencing drought conditions
like many other islands throughout the Caribbean.
"We are under drought conditions and our system
is stretched to the limit. So the Water Department
is asking the people to conserve water. We don't want
to get to a situation like Trinidad and St. Lucia
where people get water every five days or every nine
days.
We are hoping, barring any mechanical failure on Nevis,
we will be able to give people some water on a daily
basis. At nights we are going to turn down a bit and
areas that would be affected would be between the
western half of Gingerland to Charlestown," he
said.
Mr. Morris explained that as a result the affected
areas would experience low water pressure at night
but assured that the supply would be back to normal
by morning and water would be available throughout
the day.
He further explained that clients on the higher elevations
would also be adversely affected by the low pressure
and inadvertently the gravitational effects and could
expect interruptions in their water supply. However,
he said that situation when it occurred would not
be for prolonged periods.
In light of the situation, Mr. Morris had more advice
to consumers citing that the matter of conservation
and water management was not only the business of
the Department but also for the public and they should
assist where possible.
"The demand for water has increased because of
dry conditions. I know people want to water plants
but if they do so monitored, they would be able to
consume and conserve more water.
"Washing of cars, watching the kids in the bathroom,
using buckets to wash cars, [not] flushing the toilet
after every use, I believe that if we practise those
things, we will be able to save water and to have
water for as long as the drought would continue.
"I don't know when the drought would come to
an end, when we will see rain but we are hoping that
if we manage the resource properly
we can have,
for the extent of the drought, some water running.
|