The community of Unitedville Village is grappling with a severe and protracted water shortage that has left households without reliable running water for several weeks, escalating long-standing frustrations among residents. Many report that the crisis has actually persisted for months, characterized by dry taps, contaminated water supplies, and inexplicably rising utility bills despite the lack of service.
Local authorities have implemented a stopgap measure involving water trucks dispatched by the village Water Board to distribute potable water for filling containers and storage vats. However, residents overwhelmingly reject this as an inadequate solution. “This reliance on water trucks is completely insufficient and unsustainable. Our community requires functional running water infrastructure, not temporary deliveries,” one exasperated citizen remarked. The situation has become so dire that local schools have been forced to cancel sessions due to the water scarcity.
This is not an isolated incident for Unitedville; historical reports from as early as 2021 document similar water shortage complaints, indicating a chronic infrastructural failure.
Julius Espat, Area Representative for Cayo South, provided technical insight into the problem. He confirmed that while a secondary pump is currently operational, drawing water from the river, the community’s rapid expansion has critically outpaced the capacity of the existing reservoir. Despite drilling approximately 20 boreholes in search of a new water source, only one well is currently productive.
Espat indicated that a new reservoir is essential, with plans being developed in phases. A formal budget proposal is expected, and if approved in the upcoming annual budget, construction could commence as early as March of next year.
In a parallel development, Valentino Shal, CEO of the Ministry of Rural Transformation, reported progress on replacing a recently burnt-out pump and motor, with installation anticipated imminently.
Amid the widespread discontent, a dissenting voice emerged on social media, criticizing the complaints and urging proactive individual measures like purchasing large storage containers. Nonetheless, the severity of the crisis is underscored by reports of residents resorting to buying water for cooking and bathing in local creeks. Neither official could provide a definitive timeline for a permanent resolution to Unitedville’s water woes.
