Call for council to improve water quality
By John Edens, on Saturday 29 May 2010
Southland Times
Public Health South yesterday called for the Central Otago District Council to improve the sediment-laden drinking water supply in Lake Roxburgh Village.
But the council has missed out on government funding and residents face continuing contamination of the water supply from the Clutha River.
The council often issues boil water notices after heavy rain floods the river or Contact Energy lowers the Roxburgh hydro lake, which shifts sediment along the catchment to the dam and beyond. About 60 houses are affected.
The latest boil water notice was issued yesterday.
Southern District Health Board public health group manager Pip Stewart said the village's "undesirable" supply was below national drinking water standards and she encouraged the council to make improvements.
Last year the council applied for a $900,000 Health Ministry subsidy, to connect a new supply to the village from Roxburgh township.
The ministry turned down the grant bid, to review the cost and because a public health risk management plan approved an upgrade for the village, not a new scheme.
Ministry principal public health engineer Paul Prendergast said the department asked for the expensive grant bid to be reviewed and this was "not unusual".
In September, the Government announced its drinking-water subsidy scheme was on hold, which meant the council missed the latest round of grants.
Roxburgh Community Board chairman Stephen Jeffery this week travelled to Wellington with council water services manager Peter Greenwood to ask the ministry whether another grant bid was feasible.
Mr Jeffery said the meeting was unsuccessful and it was impossible to say whether funding was available.
When asked whether the council made a mistake in its application, he said "you could say that" but one could also argue a cash-strapped ministry chose to selectively interpret the grant bid.
He said he accepted water supply upgrades were needed and he was urgently pushing for change.
Phil and Kim Winterbottom, the owners of Lake Roxburgh Lodge, said there were numerous unanswered questions regarding moves by the council to secure funding.
Mr Winterbottom said he was aghast the council planned to use water meters to bill ratepayers on large sections when the village supply was "Third World".
Mrs Winterbottom said it was simple – residents were entitled to a clean supply of drinking water but there appeared to be no accountability. "We should be able to turn the tap on and drink the water but we can't."
THE RUNDOWN
Lake Roxburgh Village
Domestic connections: 60
Built: 1960s
Water production: 150 cubic metres a day
Estimated cost to upgrade: $500,000.
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Call To Improve Water Quality
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