WATER IS LIFE? THEN WHY IS ROBLOT BEING LEFT TO GO DRY?
There comes a point when silence is no longer patience—it becomes surrender.
The people of Roblot and the surrounding communities have reached that point.
For months we have been hearing about improvements to water supply across Saint Lucia. We have listened to speeches. We have watched official announcements. We have seen photographs of ceremonies and promises of better days.
But here in Roblot, one simple question remains:
Where is the water?
To the best of my recollection, the potable water situation in Roblot has never been this bad.
There was a time when we could at least depend on a Wednesday and Sunday supply. It wasn't perfect, but we knew water would arrive, often for several hours and sometimes for most of Sunday.
Today, that has become a distant memory.
For the past six months, the situation has deteriorated to the point where many households receive water only once a week—if they are fortunate. And when it does come, the supply may last no more than 90 minutes, sometimes even less.
How is any family expected to survive under those conditions?
I have four water tanks with a combined storage capacity of approximately 3,200 gallons. Today, every single one of them is empty—not because I failed to prepare, but because there simply has not been enough water flowing through the pipes to fill them.
That is the reality behind the official statements.
Naturally, people are beginning to ask difficult questions.
Has WASCO deliberately reduced the supply to Roblot and neighbouring communities?
If so, why?
Is this the result of technical limitations, poor management, or political convenience?
The public deserves honest answers—not rumours and speculation.
What makes the situation even more painful is that Choiseul residents continue to pay increasing water bills whenever water is available. At the same time, taxpayers contribute toward major national water infrastructure, including the redevelopment of the John Compton Dam, from which many residents here feel they receive little direct benefit.
People are not asking for special treatment.
They are asking for fairness.
They are asking for reliable access to one of life's most basic necessities.
During the recent Budget debate, our parliamentary representative reminded the nation that "water is life."
He was absolutely correct.
But if water truly is life, then what are we to conclude about Roblot and its neighbouring communities?
Because if the amount of water reaching us is any measure of how much our lives matter, we would all be dead by now.
That may sound sarcastic, but it reflects the depth of frustration felt by ordinary families who have been carrying buckets, rationing every gallon, postponing laundry, struggling to cook, and worrying whether there will be enough water for children, the elderly and the sick.
No amount of ribbon-cutting.
No amount of social media photographs.
No amount of carefully crafted speeches.
No amount of political spin...
...can make water flow through dry pipes.
Representation is measured by results—not publicity.
The people of Roblot do not need another promise.
They need water.
They need WASCO to explain what has gone wrong.
They need a clear timetable for restoring a reliable supply.
And they need their elected representative to advocate as passionately for this community's right to water as he speaks about water being life.
Because in 2026, no community in Saint Lucia should be reduced to wondering whether the tap will run for an hour this week.
Water is not a luxury.
It is not a political favour.
It is not something communities should have to beg for.
It is a basic human necessity.
The people of Roblot have waited long enough.
Now they deserve answers—and more importantly, they deserve water.






