Rural water supply.

andy a

Bronze
Feb 23, 2002
532
0
0
Bdaric, in response to your questions as to how water collection in the DR compares to that in Bermuda, I decided to start a new thread.

Yes, there are some fairly good sized streams in the DR, and some of them are even called rivers. Untreated water from those rivers is the main, and sometimes only, source for people in rural or poor areas. Those who can afford it drink bottled water, but many drink straight from the river. Of course the integrity of even bottled water (or anything) is questionable, so maybe some of that mountain stream water is not so bad after all. The main source of pollution upstream is probably women washing clothes right in the river. On the positive side, some of the streams are well aerated over rapids, so maybe most of the germs are killed.

A gringo friend of mine built his own house with the roof designed to catch water, but I don't remember seeing any other such designs. Typically, Dominican houses don't have roof gutters. Many rural ones have thatched roofs for which gutters wouldn't be practical.

There is a thriving water truck business. In the rural areas, the most popular truck is the Daihatsu 1-ton (recognizable with dual rear wheels). The truck is extremely well designed, with even a jake brake (exhaust brake) common on heavy duty semis. They have tanks as large as 1000 gallons and charge as little as $10 a load to preferred customers living near a river (short trip). They like to drive right into the river to fill up. That way they splash around in the tropical heat and have a little fun while the pump is going.

Some of the full-sized trucks have 2000 gallon tanks.

Small villages typically don't have a water system. Those who can afford it have their own tanks in prefabricated sizes of 350 or 600 gallons. Bigger than that requires building a concrete holding tank. Poor people often have no more than a barrel.

Even in Santiago water trucks are seen pumping water out of the river, which is extremely dirty at that point. Hopefully the water is only for hosing down the street or something. I shudder to think that it is actually for use in some of the barrios.

Of course in the DR everyone is well advised to have his own tank for backup, which is so often needed.
 

Texas Bill

Silver
Feb 11, 2003
2,174
26
0
97
www.texasbill.com
Somewhere around 30-40 years ago, Manzanillo was built up by one of the "foreign, imperialist" companies who installed an up-to-date electrical system, a sewage system, and a water treatment plant to serve the community. They also built rock houses for the employees and administrative personnel. They built a railroad to the banana plantation area northeast of Copey. The Dominican government, in their wisdom, taxed the company more and more until, in disgust, the company up and left leaving all the modern designs behind in the charge of trained specialists.

Well, the specialists moved on because the Sindico wouldn't leave them in charge nor pay them to maintain the equipment.
About a year ago, the last of the three generating plants finally gave up the ghost and died from natural causes.
The water treatment plant hasn't operated for 20 years because no one would muck out the holding tanks nor repair the electric pumps. Mostly because the overseers were political appointees more interested in cockfights than in working at their "jobs", which they didn't know anything about anyway.
So, how does this government expect to have potable water distributed to the communities, when the "potable" water is already contaminated at the source.
I feel it is a crime to tell the people that the water is safe to drink when it certainly isn't.
My main question is this: Why doesn't the medical community start calling the hullaabaloo exactly what it is and start educating the population in sanitary methods which will avoid many of the prevallent illnesses so rampant in this country? Do they not care? Are they afraid to speak up? Do they actually think that by being silent, they're doing the right thing?
I really don't understand the utter disregard for general sanitation in this country.
The way the whole country is run reminds me of the "company" town of the late 19th century in the US where the population was kept destitute and virtually imprisioned by the various coal minere, steel mills, refineries, et. for whom they worked. I'm of the opinion that DR politiciann have taken a page from our history and transplanted to the DR.

Texas Bill
 
Last edited: