Safe drinking water and adequate sanitation are crucial for poverty reduction, crucial for sustainable development and crucial for achieving any and every one of the Millennium Development Goals. – UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon

Jeff Cumberbatch - Chairman of the FTC and Deputy Dean, Law Faculty, UWI, Cave Hill
Jeff Cumberbatch – Chairman of the FTC and Deputy Dean, Law Faculty, UWI, Cave Hill

It should be easy for most Barbadians to sympathize, or perhaps even empathize, with the plight of the residents of those local districts who have had to endure a regrettable lack of piped water to their homes in recent months. It certainly is no laughing matter when one is forced to endure the discomfort and displeasure of not being able to flush a toilet by a mere press of the plunger or unable to take a shower at the end of a long hot day. The “bathe-up” or standpipe baths and gatherings of bygone Barbados ought not to be an imperative for the contemporary taxpayer. To add insult to injury, it has been reported that bills, more than nominal in some cases, continue to be issued to these long-suffering individuals for water usage by the Barbados Water Authority.

It is equally easy, if one is so inclined, to use this unfortunate circumstance as an opportunity to bash the hapless administration in office and to classify its occurrence, as has been done by more than a few, as an example of poor governance, of poor leadership, an abdication of ministerial responsibility or a heady cocktail of all the above.

At one level, the state does bear ultimate responsibility if this “essential service” should not be supplied to all citizens without discrimination. According to several of the international conventions that we have ratified, ensuring the national supply of safe, potable water is an express state obligation. For example, under Article 24 (2)(c) of the Convention of the Rights of the Child (CRC), States parties are required to pursue full implementation of this right and, in particular, shall take appropriate measures: … (c) To combat disease and malnutrition, including within the framework of primary health care, through, inter alia, the provision of adequate nutritious foods and clean drinking water [Emphasis added].

And Article 14 (2) of the Convention for the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) mandates states parties to “take all appropriate measures to eliminate discrimination against women in rural areas to ensure…to women the right: … [h] To enjoy adequate living conditions, particularly in relation to housing, sanitation, electricity and water supply, transport and communications.” [Emphasis added]

Other conventions such as the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights also recognize the right to water as an international human right, obligating the state to ensure to its citizens the supply of sufficient, safe, acceptable, physically accessible and affordable water for personal and domestic uses.

At another level, however, the state may lawfully claim exemption from this obligation where the failure in supply is owed to circumstances such as an Act of God or nature (drought or endemic water scarcity); act or default of another for whom the state assumes no responsibility; or where the failure is otherwise exempted by law so that the claim to an absolute entitlement in any circumstance whatsoever does not arise.

So far as the first is concerned, it may very well be that this condition currently subsists, although the people from the affected districts would not be acting unreasonably to query why the onus of this drought should fall on them unequally.

Nor can the state fairly place the blame on the Barbados Water Authority that, although not constitutionally part of the Crown, bears practically a sufficiently subordinate role thereto as to be considered integrated into the state machinery.

It bears mention in this regard nevertheless, that much of the blame for the recent happenings has been placed on the inherently defective and ancient mains that are currently undergoing replacement. To the extent that this is an ongoing process stretching across the change of governing administrations, it would be clearly inequitable to place all the blame for the delayed achievement of this initiative on the current administration. The partisan ascription of blame, though perhaps electorally beneficial in future, does little to relieve the current insecurity of the affected citizens.

I accept that the figurative horse is well and truly out of the stable, and that from now until the elections bell is rung by the Prime Minister, most civic failings will be seen in a partisan light against the party that comprises the current administration. This is par for the course and, I suppose, those concerned who are far more knowledgeable than I am in these matters will seek to apply and to resist this onslaught as forcefully as may be practicable.

“It is clear that the solutions to the delivery of water and sanitation for all are fundamentally political in nature and not just technical. The need for opening the “Water Tap” for transparency, accountability and participation is vital as we face the rapid increase of urbanization and the frightening implications of climate change for our scarce water resources”-George, Nhlapo and Waldorf- “The politics of achieving the Right to water” (2011)

262 responses to “The Jeff Cumberbatch Column – The Politics of Water Security”


  1. Alternative energy.

    https://www.bullfrogpower.com/


  2. @ John , if you visit Little England now, you will see someone constructing a home there. He has hired the services of the local Water Diviner, who discovered a source running towards Little England, from under St Anns Church. Industry House at one time was home to one of the Colonial Governor’s ADC’s, and also our Olympian Freda Nichools The area from Airy Hill to Industry was referred to as Pounder (s). At the back of Industry, is another small Plantation Clement Rock, which was owned by the same family as those at Laynes House Plantation, where incidentally there is an abundance of water,and a fan mill. To the west of Clement Rock was an even smaller plantation, Content.


  3. On a tangenital issue…….

    I wonder why,as stated on page 2 of the Sunday Sun 25 sep,govt is paying for a geological study of the White Hill area?

    Has the geology of the Scotland District changed to make all previous surveys invalid and why has the Soil Conservation unit which was established for this purpose not been asked to report any changes to the geological structure.


  4. I found Content a few years back after I asked someone in the area to show me.

    Clement Rock I know … both have values attached to their names which are part of our Quaker heritage.

    Rock refers to Christ and Clement Rock means I believe that the Clement family was saying our family is based on belief in Christ.

    If you look carefully at the Gully under Little England you will see it leads into Russia Gully and runs East/West.

    It is fed from the continuation of Coffee Gully and then feeds Prideaux Gully both of which run approximately North/South.

    The other major example in where a gully runs east west like that is at Applewhaites.

    Not surprisingly, there is a public water supply source by Applewhaites.

    There are others, one at the head of Jack in the Box.

    In St. Peter at Turtle Back Ridge, the change in direction is from East/West the natural direction towards the sea to North/South.

    My best explanation so far as to why gullies undergo such a radical change in direction is because of collapsed and collapsing caves under them.

    A long long time ago, before the Quakers and the Arawaks came to Barbados, sea level was much higher, in fact it started out covering Barbados!!

    As it fell, the Coral cap grew under the surface of the sea.

    As it kept falling, the coral cap became exposed and the coral, previously living in sea water died.

    The dead coral then was exposed to rainfall which tried to get to the sea.

    The rain water not only ran off the coral, but also dissolved paths to the sea in the dead coral.

    When it reached the sea inside the coral (porous) it formed a lens of fresh water just like what exists at Belle and along the West Coast and parts of the South East Coast

    This dissolved the rock and formed caves well below the surface in the coral.

    My theory is that as the sea level continued to fall the caves were left hanging in air.

    Over time the roofs collapsed and the floor rose with the debris from the collapse.

    The size of the cave remained the same so effectively it rose up through the coral.

    I think the place you referred to as “The Crack” in Castle Grant Gully is the result of such a process where the cave ultimately reached the surface as evidenced by caves in the two sides of the gully.

    Wherever you see a gully changing direction there is water!!

    It is following a path it cut in the dead coral to the cave.

    Another good example is in Farmer’s Gully where in the 1890’s a 50 foot well was sunk.

    If you look down at the surface of the water you can see it flowing.

    The well hit an underground stream dead on.

    Senn did not exist then so it was probably done by divination!!

    Use of water from this source was discontinued in 1917 after it was linked to a second outbreak of Typhoid fever.

    Now, the underground stream flows to the Trent’s or Porter’s catchment, probably Porters forget which…. I would have to look back at the model I built on the computer to predict its path.


  5. There is a booklet by Hans Machel that used to be in the Museum Library which has some nice diagrams on the geology of Barbados


  6. There is a well at Bushy Park, just up the road from Little England.

    It is 158 feet deep to water and it is 1-2 feet deep …. Senn Report, 1946

    It is at an elevation of 870 feet.

    Other wells in the area are at Cliton (168ft), Olive Branch (160?)

    All these wells have one thing in common.

    The streams which feed them all deposit water at Applewhaites some of which is extracted for the public water supply and the rest flows on to Belle/Codrington and the “desal” plant.

    You will find that to put a pump in any well at Little England will require a license from the BWA ….. check the Barbados Water Authority Act!!

    I can’t see them granting a new license for private extraction from their source!!

    Existing wells still in operation will, I guess continue … grandfather clause!!


  7. No well on the list at Pleasant Vale

    That I think shows the harmony and friendship that existed in the area and was passed down from Quaker times.

    The Barbados Water Supply Company could only supply water up to 700 feet, physically impossible to get higher.

    It was bought out by the government in the late 1890’s as was the Bridgetown Water Supply Company and the WWD formed. That has become the BWA.

    My guess is that the well at Bushy Park supplied people working at the same Bushy Park and Pleasant Vale from the time it was dug, whenever that was.

    There was no well at Lammings but at that elevation there are surface sources because no coral grew there.

    Before the well at Bushy Park these sources probably supplied people living and working in the area.

    There had to exist harmony and friendship!!!!

    Today it is a dog eat dog world.

    No one cares about his neighbor.

    History shows the area was quite stable and predictable so water must have been available for all as they needed.

    I am going to propose the first step to solving the water woes created by the politicians.

    Get together and work for one another … old time Bajan value handed down from generations before!!!

    When you get past this realization that you have to work together and are actually doing it, make noise with the politicians who have spent the last 50 years dividing you and destroying the harmony that existed in St. Joseph.

    Don’t waste time with the BWA unless you find them lax in repairing burst pipes or not meeting a tanker delivery schedule.

    They can only distribute what they can pump, and God determines that through the rain!!

    Spend your protest time outside Parliament where the politicians routinely meet to formalize their plans to disrupt your peaceful existence in St. Joseph.

    Another place to protest would be on the Esplanade!!!

    If however you actually figure out how to work together after 50 years of brain washing, the politicians will be falling over themselves looking to join you!!

    … and if that happens, the whole of Barbados will breathe a collective sigh of relief because you will have neutered them!!


  8. Vincent Haynes September 25, 2016 at 1:32 PM
    I also recall a fellow named Tello, running against Adams and Smith . (Vote Top and Bottom. Just like cutting canes,was BoyCjile’s slogan.
    Following Tello’s failure , the song of the day was, ” Ah drink up all of Tello rum, and ah vote fer Labour.”


  9. Olive Branch became a cricket ground for the Sugar Hill team of Goodwill ,another Quaker word. The old mill wall was the pavilion. Olive Branch also housed some big concrete tanks which Andrews Factory used to dump the worthless molasses, or ratta ,into.
    On the main road from Russia Village , just opposite the road to Olive Branch was one of the deepest wells that I had ever seen. Even during dry spells, looking down into this well when the sun was directly overhead , indicated the presence of water.


  10. I was looking at an old map from 1891 which plotted the progress of the installation of standpipes in rural Barbados by what was then known as the Barbados Water Supply Co.

    There were none at the time in St. Joseph, or St. Andrew or St. John or for that matter St. Lucy.

    The tunnels at Harrison and Coles Cave were the highest point of supply, 768 feet so St. Joseph was out of reach.

    Castle Grant was a dream!!

    … and yet, no one in St. Joseph or St. Andrew or St. John or St. Lucy died of thirst.

    The nearest standpipe to St. Joseph looks like it was in the village past Strong Hope, fed from the tunnels in the nearby caves.

    Next time I am in the area I will look in the Walkes Spring area on the way to Mount Wilton and see if I see any evidence of the old standpipe.

    Colonel, do you remember the locations of standpipes you came and found as a boy?

    I suspect St. Joseph was without piped water till the 1930’s/40’s

    By 1891, the installation of Standpipes had reached as far north as Speightstown with none inland in St. Peter.

    I know that by 1901 they had reached up to Boscobelle because I read of the destruction of the water main in the 1901 Boscobelle landslip.

    Parts of Barbados got by without piped water probably until the 1930’s perhaps 1940’s when the geology of the country was beginning to be understood and water sources could be identified and exploited.

    By the 1960’s water resources had been identified and quantified.

    …. and then we got inflicted with a bunch of jokers who squandered it, like everything they touched!!


  11. My father told a story of some workers lifting water in a cask out of a well at Strong Hope. During a lift of a full cask of water, a pen knife was observed stuck into the side of it. The cask was emptied , sent down again, and was quickly brought back up bearing a passenger, a European, who had been exploring the caves, entering at Coles Cave.
    By the time I came along, St Joseph was awash with stand pipes. I was shown a well in Chimborazzo that provided the supply before the stand pipes came along. This too would have provided Chimporazzo Mill with water. Some parts of St Joseph were fed directly from Golden Ridge ,like Parris Hill and Airy Hill,and Clement Rock. Bushy Park Plantation is on that line ,and was fed by a pipe running through the gully in Cooper Bottom. Just past the cart road to Little England, there was a stand pipe of the left before the vicarage.


  12. Was the St. Ann’s vicarage at Industry?

    Where is Cooper Bottom?

    Never heard of it.

    I have some Cooper ancestors but I always thought they came from St. Philip or Christ Church as did most of my local ancestors.

    Is that the bottom on St. Ann’s side on the road to Retreat?

    I have crossed the gully just past Industry and come up in Bushy Park yard.

    I guess the pipe went that way to feed Bushy Park and also continued up the main road to Clement Rock/Parris Hill.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading