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Potable
water is trucked or ferried bv banca to far-off barangays
Camarines Norte WD: Socializing water service
by Teodoro
M. Reynoso
Quezon
City---The Local Water Utilities Administration (LWUA) recently
commended the Camarines Norte Water District (CNWD) for
its mass socialized water supply program citing that it
could serve as a model for other water districts in their
bid to provide piped potable water to thousand of generally
poor families living the far-flung,oftentimes
Inaccessible rural hinterland and isolated island communities
in the country.
LWUA Administrator Lorenzo H. Jamora said the CNWD socialized
water supply program that it started to implement in 1998
has been successful in providing potable water access to
hundreds of farmer and fisher folk families in the far interior
and isolated island sitios and barangays of the capital
Daet and the outlying towns of Vinzons, Mercedes, Labo and
Talisay.
CNWD
which also covers the towns of Basud and San Vicente currently
supplies potable piped water to more than 18,000 regular
paying service connectors in the seven towns of Camarines
Norte that used to be served by the now-defunct provincial
waterworks system until the establishment of the CNWD in
1975.
Despite this improvement, however, a sizable segment of
the population in its area of coverage still remains unserved
especially those in the interior, largely agricultural communities.
And more than physical factors like distance and accessibility,
the main constraint had been the prohibitive major expansion
cost on the part of the water district and the lack of affordability
on the part of the target consumers.
Jamora
said the CNWD has been able to overcome these limiting factors
and reach to these distant areas through three socialized
water supply projects namely the Water Point or public faucet
systems that cater to the water needs of communities that
are relatively near to existing CNWD mains but cannot afford
individual household connections; the Hatid- Tubig sa
Barangay where drinking water is rationed daily through
water lorries to sitios and barangays not yet reached by
the system; and the so-called Hatid-Tubig sa Isla where
potable water is ferried through a motorized banca for rationing
to the hard-to-reach island communities.
Jamora said this recourse could be replicated by other water
districts in the country especially those in areas with
numerous hinterland or upland as well as isolated island
communities where access to potable water is a most urgent
need.
"This
will entail not only a paradigm shift in the thinking or
orientation on the part of water district policy-makers,
managers and operators but also a strong will to go where
water districts have not gone before", Jamora said.
" However, I believe that the prevailing conditions
in the potential market expansion areas not to mention the
so-called "missionary routes" require innovation,
creativity and improvisation on the part of the water districts",
he added.
But where water supply development in place is not only
feasible but also viable or could pay for itself, CNWD offers
the option of a separate waterworks system as in the case
of the populous but far-off barangay of Matnog in the town
of Basud. In fact, the development of a modern waterworks
system to cater to the individual household needs of Bgy.
Matnog is already in the works following the approval by
barangay officials and residents of the project as proposed
by CNWD general manager Nanette Boma.
In a separate interview, GM Boma said that the water district
is barely breaking even in its Hatid- Tubig programs catering
to the distant hinterland and isolated island barangays
but she said the water point public faucet systems, thanks
to the cooperation of the barangay officials and residents,
are more than paying for the cost of installation and operation
and maintenance of the facilities. This, she said, has encouraged
the CNWD to plan for the establishment of more water points
to cover more barangays and sitios in Daet and other towns
being served by the water district. At present, CNWD has
21 water points serving some 600 households or about 3,000
persons.
GM Boma explained that the CNWD socialized water program
worked under the principle of retail selling where the consumers
buy only the water that they need and can afford to pay
for. In the case of the water point, through a barangay
resolution, a resident is assigned to serve as caretaker
who is also responsible in the safeguarding of the service
line and in the retailing of water. The barangay retails
water from the water point at P1.25 per 20-liter container
or just six centavos per liter of water.
The barangay council shall be responsible for paying the
CNWD for water drawn as per individual water point meter
reading.
In the Hatid program, water is directly retailed by assigned
water district personnel at the same price.
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