When will the BWA integrate an alternative energy strategy to reduce its monthly electricity bill of approx 1 million dollars.
When will the BWA integrate an alternative energy strategy to reduce its monthly electricity bill of approx 1 million dollars.

In 2009 late Prime Minister David Thompson approved a hike in water rates charged by 60% with the promise the increased cash flow would improve the level of service and upgrade to equipment by the Barbados Water Authority (BWA) – see Has the BWA Short-changed Barbadians After Benefiting from a 60% Rate Hike in 2009? Nearly six years later there has been no significant change. The replacement project of eighty year old mains has been delayed by industrial and other issues although there has been improvement how the BWA communicates its many challenges to the public, BUT overall, there has been no quantum lift in the efficiency of the BWA. We can discuss on another blog what policy position has been taken to significantly reduce or replace the cost of pumping water to the tune of approximately one million dollars monthly which the Barbados Light & Power is happy to pocket.

At this time of the year – to mimic the 11 plus chatter – there is a hue and cry about dry taps and the havoc it causes to schools and nurseries forced to close operations along with other inconveniences. BU and sensible Barbadians are sympathetic to BWA workers who have to work around the clock to fix broken water mains and all the other activities to get things back on track.

Recently listeners to Voice of Barbados 92.9 heard the BWA’s Communications Specialist in an emotional but sincere  explanation of the many challenges confronting the BWA. The electorate needs to be given more respect, it needs to hear Ms. Haig’s quick responses to day to day queries and concerns BUT what taxpayers need to hear also is from government through the minister responsible, to share a critical path analysis of the deliverable which were promised by the late David Thompson in his 2009 speech to the BWA.

Frankly some of us have become sick and tired of state corporation after state corporation operating at a low level of efficiency. The low performances do no align with our ‘high’ level of education, and instead meets the definition of a banana republic. Sadly it seems we have little to no self- awareness that by allowing our governance and management systems to disintegrate we are eroding the progress which our ancestors slaved to build on our behalf.

BU and thousands of Barbadians supported the message of change by this government in 2008 and also voted to extend the mandate under Prime Minister Stuart when the alternatives were considered. There is enough evidence after six years for all to grade the kneejerk, adhoc, stupid public responses to issues of the day coming from this government. We have lost our leadership position in the Caribbean to the ‘low’ islands in the process.

A decade worth of Auditor General reports tell a story of the decline in state governance, graft, political ignorance yet like the Emperor and his new clothes Barbadians respond by continuing to be silent, disengaging from basic civic responsibilities or hold politically partisan positions. Bishop John Holders’s recent message to parliamentarians was on the money but will likely not resonate.

We need water to flow from our taps because frequent interrupted supply will impact the quality of life we boast about to the world. Also our government and others to follow, need to appreciate if they make the people a promise – in this scenario a 60% increase in water rates to support a better functioning BWA – six years later there must be a coherent report to the nation why we have been marking time.

97 responses to “Problemas de Agua”


  1. …@ David
    Reducing the cost of pumping water and fixing the mains are separate jobs to be done.
    +++++++++++++++++++++
    …and building a new palatial headquarters is seperate too…?

    What wunna fellows fail to realize is that decisions are not based on logical priorities like fixing leaks etc, but on WHO stands to benefit most from what project, while managing to keep water running…

    Somebody benefits from the building
    Somebody will benefit for the pumps (which will likely not work anyway …)
    But the leaks are just a lotta hard work that will only benefit BWA workers and brass bowls customers…THAT can therefore be deferred ad infinum….


  2. What are you suggesting Bushie, that the government is building a spanking new headquarters to give the Innotechs and Gollops some pocket change?


  3. With all the new ,and not so new ,technology available ,BWA should be able to discover leaks and rectify them in short order before they escalate into a major eruption,as we have been experiencing recently.
    In those far off days when ordinary men were in charge of the various reservoirs, the Supervisor/Foreman what ever , was equipped with a red bicycle and a copper sounding rod ,and would regularly patrolled the pipe line network in his patch, stopping frequently and listening for leaks on the pipe line with his sounding road, and was able to pinpoint any leak which occurred , as accurately as any modern day Leak Detector. A work crew, stationed at the reservoir, would be immediately despatched to mend that broken pipe.
    This is as near as possible to Preventive Maintenance on any buried pipeline. But then again, Preventive Maintenance is Vorbeugende Wartung in Barbados,…….a foreign language.
    Why should those people in St Joseph ,and other communities who have been without water ,sometimes for days, are being charged by BWA the same as those who live in the unaffected areas, and possibly those living in Cattlewash, who have the benefit of a direct main from Newcastle to the pumping substation at Cattlewash and a back up tank at St Elizabeth.


  4. @Colonel Buggy

    Is it that simple? Replacing 80 year old mains? Is it only about finding leaks?

    Also many of the outages we have been experiencing has to do with low supply at the reservoirs.

    The BWA has simple not manages water generation and distribution very well over the years. And this straddles both parties.


  5. Ping Pong | June 18, 2014 at 6:30 AM |
    I am told that announcements have been made regarding the solid waste tax. I am further told that payment of the tax paid is due by end of JUNE. Failure to pay will incur a 5% PER MONTH penalty!!! As of today 18 June, I am yet to receive a bill. Any comments? Maybe this is all rumour.
    ………………………………………………………………………………
    The same government that has kept Ms Myrie and Al Barak is now threatening the people of this country with a penalty , and so far I ‘ve not heard anyone receiving this supplementary tax bill.
    Is it the intention of this administration to push the people of this country past their yielding point, so that Alias Smith and Jones could crack some heads? Terrorism comes in all forms. We the people of this country have been kidnapped and must pay the ransom.


  6. @ David

    What about the controversy surrounding the alleged importation of the new water meters by a particular entity?

    Recall in December 2009, the Inter-American Development Bank approved two loans for Barbados in the sum of US$70M; US$50M of which will be used to make the BWA more efficient.
    According to the IDB report dated December 03, 2009: “The IDB loan will help modernize BWA’s organizational structure and boost its efficiency through the implementation of a Corporate Business Plan and upgraded billing and collection systems.”
    “The installation of 50,000 new meters and network infrastructure improvements are expected to reduce unaccounted for water–the difference between total water produced and water billed–by at least 10 percentage points, which will in turn help strengthen BWA’s financial position.”

    In October 2013, a “smart meter project” was announced by Dr. David Estwick at the signing of a contract with a firm called Canadian Commercial Corporation, which is supposed to be overseeing the process of installing 100,000 of these meters. Dr. Estwick believes that this project will help to save money for the BWA and would facilitate a more practical method of monitoring customer consumption water patterns.
    Dr. Estwick stated “persons who suffered in the past from having a bill that is $30 this month and then next month it is $3000, some sort of erratic billing arrangements, those will become things of the past with this new smart meter capability.”

    On Saturday May 11, 2013, BWA’s acting general manager Dr. John Mwansa was quoted as saying “Barbadian households would this year have their current meters replaced with state-of-the-art devices that can alert the householder to problems with pipes in the home.”

    In January 2014, chairman of the BWA, Dr. Atlee Brathwaite informed Barbadians that from February 2014, the Water Authority will commence installation of 98,ooo high technology meters to replace the outdated meters that are currently being used. It is interesting to note that meters have already been installed at some commercial businesses.


  7. @Artaxerxes

    According to this link minister Estwick promised in January this year the project will start soon. This is only June, have patience, you know how long it takes to mobilize projects.

    http://www.barbadosadvocate.com/newsitem.asp?more=local&NewsID=34906


  8. @PDC
    The youth, and the not so old need to hear your message.


  9. In January 2009, CBC reported that the BWA has hoping to source funds from the CDB to build its new $40M headquarters in Wildey, St. Michael.

    Is there any truth in the rumor that Innotech Services Limited is financing the project with offshore money from the Unitrident Capital Corporation? Is it true that UCC’s registered is registered in Barbados and its address is Warrens, St. Michael, in “close proximity” to Innotech? Is it also true that, although Innotech is a Barbadian registered business, it is primarily owned by a St. Lucian company?

    Would not the Freedom of information Act, if implemented, put to bed these types of rumors?


  10. @ David
    “What are you suggesting Bushie……”
    ++++++++++++
    “Suggesting” shiite !!!!! 🙂
    …some things are obvious.


  11. @Artaxerxes

    “…….it is primarily owned by a St. Lucian company?”

    Have no idea if above is correct but once you see a local company “primarily owned” by a St. Lucian company you can be sure it is for tax planning purposes.


  12. Nostradamus | June 19, 2014 at 9:11 AM
    “Have no idea if above is correct but once you see a local company “primarily owned” by a St. Lucian company you can be sure it is for tax planning purposes.”

    Ahhhhhh… that’s what you think!!!!! I used the words “primarily owned” deliberately. You would be able to gain more if you conduct your own research.

  13. Westing to the West Avatar
    Westing to the West

    Artaxerxes,
    whats your point?


  14. I don’t mean to deflect from the conversation beforehand, but I think that this piece of information is important to mention.
    A Puerto Rican friend of mine just visited Barbados on a cruised, and it so happened that we were in a conversation regarding the islands in the Caribbean. And out of the clear blue sky as Bajans would say: He told me that he hated Barbados when compared to the few islands he had visited on his cruised. And that somehow hurt me because this is the land of my birth he was talking about, but I had to gather up the courage to ask him why: And he told me that, “The people in Barbados were to aggressive, especially those who sold they merchandised on the Beach and in the town”. I guess there is a lesson somewhere in this man experience in Barbados; we can learn from?


  15. A lot of people, who visits the Caribbean, do so for the beautiful sand and sea, as well as a tranquility and hospitality of the people. Their do not like to be harassed. I know that local Barbadians are after the American dollar, but it does a disservice to Barbados, when these people do not return because there are hassled.


  16. Stetson Babb

    27 mins · BlackBerry Smartphones App ·

    Some of you may find the below interesting and\or useful:Extension Issued for Municipal Solid Waste Tax.Property owners are being advised that the date for the first instalment payment of the new Municipal Solid Waste Tax has been extended to Monday, July 28, 2014.The Revenue Commissioner of the Barbados Revenue Authority, Margaret Sivers, is reminding property owners that the tax may be paid in two equal instalments.The Municipal Solid Waste Tax bills showing the amount that property owners are required to pay for the current year, have been issued and should be received shortly.She also explained that the tax is calculated at a rate of 0.3 per cent of the site value of all properties with an improved value, whether for residential or commercial use.“Failure to pay the tax by the specified dates will result in a penalty of 5 per cent of the tax demanded and unpaid. In addition to the penalty imposed, interest at the rate of one per cent for each month on the penalty and the unpaid tax at the prescribed time will be charged,” Sivers said.

  17. Colonel Buggy Avatar

    Perhaps we should ask those Barbadians who have done numerous cruises up and down the Caribbean, how do they honestly compare Barbados with the other islands. On my last cruise I boarded at Barbados, and from Castries , our land tour partners were a group of Jamaicans , some out of the states and others out of Jamaica, wonderful people. The only complaint they had about Barbados, was that the traveled around the island, and could not find anyone selling roasted Breadfruit. They were critical about the price of goods and services in St Lucia, compared with Barbados, but that could be due to the fact that the day we docked in Castries was a bank holiday.

  18. Colonel Buggy Avatar

    I was always under the impression that Municipal Solid Waste tax, is the salary and perks that we pay to this present lot of useless dictators.


  19. Colonel

    The three hot spots in the Caribbean seems to be Jamaica, St. Lucia and the Dominican Republic these days.

    I have heard nothing but positive things about St. Lucia tourism from my end. On the other hand, the feedback I have gotten about Barbados tourism wasn’t that encouraging.


  20. @Artax

    You dropped a bomb and leave? Tell us more or inbox.


  21. Westing to the West | June 19, 2014 at 12:53 PM |

    Artaxerxes,
    whats your point?

    Ask your favourite politicians what exactly is my point.

  22. Westing to the West Avatar
    Westing to the West

    why would I ask BLP politicians?


  23. Artaxerxes,

    Everybody seem to be slow learners today. LOL. Cant they figure out this St Lucian connection? I heard there are other connections in Antigua also.
    So much for the bold faced push about integrity which so many people bought into!


  24. Prodigal Son | June 20, 2014 at 8:11 AM |

    Prodigal, there are some people who pretend to be slow learners; especially if it has any to do with the party they blindly support. Ask yourself a question, why is it that Innotech is being awarded (or rewarded) majority of government contracts, just like how Rayside Construction under CLICO management was being “rewarded” majority of the road works contracts. We can see why these guys don’t want integrity legislation.

    Westing to the West | June 20, 2014 at 8:10 AM |
    “why would I ask BLP politicians?”

    My friend, you are the one who has the problem with the information, not me……. so, I don’t give one @#*%& who you ask. You could ask politicians from the BLP, DLP, PEP, PDC, the Jamaican Labour Party, Antiguan Labour Party, St. Lucia Labour Party, your mother, father aunt, sister…… anyone you choose to ask…….. as Bushie would say…. I don’t give a shiite.


  25. @ David

    The BWA project was alleged to have an original budgeted cost of $30M, but has gone in excess of $100M due to interest charges.

    Unitrident Capital Corporation [UCC], was incorporated as a company under the laws of Barbados, at the Corporate Registry – #33605 on August 11, 2010. The company’s lone director, W. B. Kitsch, is supposed to be residing in the Turks & Caicos Islands.

  26. Westing to the West Avatar
    Westing to the West

    Problem? Explain?


  27. @Artax

    Are you suggesting the 3S model is being used to deliver the BWA headquarters with Innotech delivering the end services?

  28. Westing to the West Avatar
    Westing to the West

    Are you sure that company financed the project?


  29. @ David
    It must be clear to you by now…..that the ONLY PEOPLE who could be robbed …..so OPENLY……so TRANSPARENTLY….and so CONSISTENTLY ….are Bajan Brass Bowls….
    ….and then to be told to bring these shiite taxes on any property that they have been able to manage to save up (or borrow) a few dollars and purchase ….by July 28th……??!!

    ….perhaps Bushie’s “brass bowl analogy” is now outdated and Pieceuhderock’s female-rabbit-type descriptions are MUCH MORE applicable to us now….


  30. @Bush Tea

    What is interesting is that nobody in government anticipated that communicating the tax in a timely manner to household who pay based on receiving a bill would create concern in an environment where low and middle class are under pressure.


  31. @ David
    Anticipated communication…?

    Do you think they anticipated that Landlords will now look to increase rents to cover these additional shiite taxes?
    This is probably the single most idiotic tax that has ever been openly promulgated by any government anywhere….

    Whoever came up with the idea probably named the tax after themselves…..
    Brass bowl shiites….


  32. @Bushie

    The gutting of the artifical middleclass is what it is.


  33. David, perhaps it is long overdue and probably quite a logical step..
    But surely someone needs to have a PLAN…and to share said plan with those who are about to make the sacrifices…

    Who the hell in their right minds can expect to impose such measures on people who are still minded that they are somehow blessed – and deserving of all the good things of this world – while working like easy-boys?

    ….then again, no one in their right mind goes around quoting Shakespeare in 2014 …..to people who are more into twitter and Instagram…. #shiitetalk. 🙂


  34. @Bush Tea

    #brassbowls

  35. Due Diligence Avatar

    Bush Tea | June 20, 2014 at 12:21 PM |
    ….then again, no one in their right mind goes around quoting Shakespeare in 2014 …..to people who are more into twitter and Instagram…. #shiitetalk.

    This is from a June 17 article in Barbados Today “PM to lead CARICOM debate on the economy.”

    Stuart said that his administration would not be fazed. He added that while “slings and arrows of outrageous fortune” were hurled at Minister of Finance Chris Sinkler and other Members of Parliament from all directions, they stood steadfast.

    If the schools do not teach Shakespeare in 2014, how are the Twitterers, Instgramers and Facebookers going to understand what their Prime Minister is talking about.

  36. Due Diligence Avatar

    David

    This from the article AG-Media to blame at: http://www.barbadostoday.bb/2014/06/19/ag-media-to-blame/

    Attorney General and Minister and Home Affairs Adriel Brathwaite is insisting that the recent spate of violence is not an indication of any increase in crime, or the emergence   of new trends; and he is blaming the media for making it out to be worse than it is.

    Speaking to reporters against the background of recent gunplay in The Ivy and the murder of a British man last weekend, Brathwaite said the media were partly responsible for the view that crime was on the increase in the island.

    “You guys in the media are the cause of this. The fear of crime is as devastating as the crime itself. No matter how I use statistics to show that we are in fact down, in terms of reported crime, that [fact] is not highlighted. But let someone get stabbed in St Lawrence Gap, that’s highlighted and indicative that crime is up in the country,” he charged this morning on the sidelines of a Caribbean Basin Security Initiative Workshop at the Accra Beach Resort, in Hastings, Christ Church.

    So, a British visitor is murdered in one the main tourist districts, (and it is widely reported in the media in Barbados number 1 source market) and the highest ranking officer of the law in the land thinks the local media should just overlook reporting on the the violent crimes like it overlooks the white collar crimes of those in power.”


  37. @Due Diligence

    When a government begins to attack the media, soon to follow BU and others in social media, you know they are out of ideas.

    The quote of the talk show yesterday: how can our government effectively combat crime in all of Barbados IF they can’t keep a short stretch in St. Lawrence Gap safe.

    AG Brathwaite has no credibility to get the average Bajan to believe.


  38. David | June 20, 2014 at 8:55 AM |
    @Artax
    “Are you suggesting the 3S model is being used to deliver the BWA headquarters with Innotech delivering the end services?”

    From what I understand, rumour has it that Innotech had preference over those other companies who were required to bid for the contract, and the said company was given possession of the site before the contract was actually signed.

    “Good Governance assures that corruption is minimized, the views of the people are taken into account and that the voices of the most vulnerable members of society are heard in decision-making. It is also responsive to the present and future needs of society. Barbados needs Good Governance now like it never has before.” (page 46: DLP 2008 manifesto)

    Moreover, this DLP administration promised in their 2008 manifesto to immediately introduce integrity legislation requiring a declaration of assets by public officials, a Code of Conduct for Ministers, and a new Freedom of Information law upon forming the government.

    Surely, if these laws to enable a process of good governance were introduce, and the DLP took us into their confidence by “the publication of details of agreements and contracts involving the government and its agencies” (page 47: DLP 2008 manifesto), we would not have to grapple with talk of corruption in innuendo.

    Instead of trying to shoot the messenger, DLP sympathizers and those like “Westing to the West”, should plead with their kin in the DLP to introduce integrity legislation. They should also bring facts to the BU household that would prove these allegations are only rumours.

  39. Westing to the West Avatar
    Westing to the West

    Artaxerxes
    “From what I understand, rumour has it that Innotech had preference over those other companies who were required to bid for the contract”
    THE PREFERENCE WAS IT ACTUALLY SUBMITTED A BID. THATS USUALLY ONE WAY TO GET A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE OVER YOUR COMPETITORS.

  40. Due Diligence Avatar

    David
    The damned media is at it again – reporting a crime – inciting fear.

    http://www.nationnews.com/articles/view/man-stabbed-in-the-city/

    FRI, JUNE 20, 2014 – 4:07 PM

    A VENDOR WAS stabbed multiple times just after 1 p.m. today in Jubilee Gardens, The City.

    The victim, popularly known as “Bush Man,” received several stab wounds to his back, neck and leg.

    He was rushed to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital by ambulance.
    More details as they come to hand. (RB)

    Sure hope that is not BU Bush Man


  41. Back to this shiite tax according to Bush Tea.

    We all know that this is an ignorant onerous tax that has nothing to do with solid waste. The head of the BRA said today that although it is based on land valuation, it is not a land tax. Ms Silvers, I know you are bright, you went to school at Foundation but with all due respect, you really think bajans are idiots? If it is based on land values, it has to be a land tax.

    In light of this, David and Artaxerxes, do you know if we all refuse to pay this tax……….civil disobedience, can they arrest all of us or confiscate our properties? We have lawyers in the BLP, other lawyers who claim to be independants, they all own several properties, why cannot these lawyers come together for the good of Barbados and bring a class action suit against this inept incompetent government?

    Georgie Porgie likes A&M hymns and I quote this one, 689:

    “Once to every man and nation comes the moment to decide,
    In the strife of truth with falsehood for the good or evil side
    Some great cause like Christ in Jewry, offering each the bloom or blight
    Parts the goats upon the left hand and the sheep upon the right
    And the choice goes by forever twixt the darkness and that light”.

    Someone needs to stand up against this tyranny called the DLP government. They imposed a consolidated tax on income, no one protested, they now come to tax our properties twice in one year and now they are going for the credit unions. Heavens man, this is three taxes just so on one set of people, (those of us who have money in credit unions).

    And to think that the idiot we have for a PM could get in our House and boldfacedly say……history will record them as the best government ever? I am convinced that his diabetes is affecting his brain. Read today’s Nation editorial. that sums it up!

    I am sick of this government, honestly and I am tired talking.


  42. Some Landlords / home owners are finding a way to offset these harsh times and the Ministerial Solid Waste Tax.
    https://www.flickr.com/photos/83717797@N04/14283377989/
    Is this government forcing people to become, what amounts to , Brothel Keepers?


  43. Ok. Just worked our how much my municipal solid waste tax will be. On a land value of $150,900 I multiplied by 0.3 (I didn’t go to the same school as the Honorable Chris and I have a calculator lol!!!) and now I know that I “owe?” the government an additional $452.72 of my money. Since the land tax on the same property is currently $467.50 the new tax effectively doubles my property tax, AND YOURS.

    Not nice.

    Not nice at all.

    Seems like a money grab to me.

    This is what wunna voted for?


  44. At the end of the next four years, you and I and Barbados may be deemed piss poor,and only a step away from Haiti, but at this same time some of the richest men and women will be making their exist from the precincts of Palmetto Street.
    A fellow on the block , recently told me that the undersea volcano Kick ’em Jenny,should be renamed “Dipper Barrow”, as he must be turning like a ships propellor in his watery Caribbean grave.


  45. Now we have two , not so old,Government buildings made redundant. The old National Insurance Building and the Louis Lynch School. The government should think hard about demolishing these buildings, as sooner, rather that later, they may become useful as Almshouses, for the new generation of paupers.

  46. Colonel Buggy Avatar

    IMF Guideline to the Barbados Government Tax his land, tax his wage,
    Tax the bed in which he lays,
    Tax his tractor , Tax his mule,
    Tax his cow, tax his goat,
    Tax his pants ,tax his coat,
    Tax his ties ,tax his shirts,
    Tax his work, tax his dirt,
    Tax his chew, tax his smoke,
    Teach him taxes are no joke,
    Tax his car, tax his grass,
    Tax the roads he must pass,
    Tax his food,tax his drinks
    Tax him if he tries to think,
    Tax his sodas, tax his beers,
    If he cries, tax his tears,
    Tax his bills, tax his gas,
    Tax his notes,tax his cash,
    Tax him good and let him know ,
    That after taxes he has no dough,
    If he hollers ,tax him more,
    Tax him until he is good and sore,
    Tax his coffin,tax his grave,
    Tax the sod in which he lays,
    Put these words upon his tomb;
    “Taxes drove me to my doom”
    And when he’s gone ,we won’t relax,
    We’ll still be after the inheritance tax.
    (Copied from Belfast Rushlight Magazine)

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