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Tuesday, March 10, 2026

 

Choiseul on the Move – Speech Watch

Water, Debt, Delivery… and the Big Test of Government

The recent parliamentary presentation by the Minister for Public Utilities was designed to do one thing: convince Saint Lucians that the government’s water resolutions are not just policy papers, but a serious rescue plan for a struggling water system. It was bold, energetic, and at times emotional. It spoke of leaking pipelines, climate pressure, vulnerable households, neglected communities, and a government determined to act.

But here on Choiseul on the Move, we do not stop at applause lines. We dig deeper. Because when it comes to water in Saint Lucia, this is not just about speeches in Parliament. This is about whether families can bathe their children, whether farmers can plan, whether businesses can function, and whether entire communities can trust that when they turn the pipe, water will actually come.


1. Borrowing for Investment – Sound Logic, But Only If It Delivers

One of the Minister’s main arguments was that there is a difference between borrowing to consume and borrowing to invest. On paper, that is absolutely true. A country can responsibly borrow if the money is going into infrastructure that strengthens the economy and improves people’s lives.

The government wants Saint Lucians to see the $22.8 million loan as exactly that: a strategic investment in the nation’s water future, not wasteful spending, not political handouts, and not reckless borrowing.

Fair enough. But Saint Lucians are no longer living in the world of theory. They are living in the world of dry taps, trucked water, low pressure, and old promises. So while the economics may sound convincing, the public will judge this loan by one unforgiving standard: results.

Borrowing for investment is only wise when the investment truly changes lives.


2. Procurement Reform – Good on Paper, But Will It Hold?

The Minister pointed to recent amendments to the Procurement Act, saying the loopholes of the past have been patched and that WASCO now has the room to operate while staying inside the law and within international standards.

That sounds encouraging. Transparency matters. Accountability matters. Every cent matters. And if public money is being borrowed in our name, the people of Saint Lucia have every right to demand full value for money.

Still, Choiseul on the Move must make one thing crystal clear: good laws do not automatically produce good governance. The real test is not what is written in the Act. The real test is whether contracts are properly managed, whether procurement is transparent, whether timelines are respected, and whether taxpayers can clearly see where the money is going.

In short, Saint Lucians do not just need promises of accountability. They need visible accountability.


3. The Heart of the Crisis – A Water System Bleeding Through Old Pipes

Perhaps the strongest part of the Minister’s speech was the explanation of the full journey of water: production, transmission, and distribution. From the dam to the treatment plant, from the treatment plant to the pipes, from the pipes to people’s homes — every stage matters.

And according to the Minister, every stage has been under strain for years. The most alarming figure presented was this: 43% of treated water is lost before it ever reaches a paying customer.

Read that again. Nearly half of the water that is captured, treated, pumped, and pressurized is disappearing into the ground or slipping away through broken and outdated infrastructure. That is not a minor leak. That is a national wound.

The plan to replace a major section of the aging 24-inch pipeline from the John Compton Dam with a stronger 32-inch pipeline running parallel to the old one is therefore not a cosmetic job. It is a necessary intervention.

If done properly, it could improve pressure, increase delivery capacity, and reduce major losses. But once again, the nation will not judge the plan by engineering language. The nation will judge it by whether supply improves in real homes, in real communities, on real mornings.


4. Modern Technology – Necessary, But Not Magical

The speech also spoke of installing bulk meters and a state-of-the-art electronic control system to detect leaks in real time. That is the language of modernization, and rightly so.

In an era where utilities worldwide use digital systems to track performance, Saint Lucia cannot afford to manage water with yesterday’s methods. Real-time monitoring could help WASCO move from reacting late to responding quickly.

But technology is not magic. Screens, meters, and control panels do not fix a utility by themselves. They still require trained staff, proper maintenance, sound management, and institutional discipline.

The hardware may be new, but the real question is whether the system behind it will also be renewed.


5. Climate Change – No Longer a Future Threat

The Minister was right to connect the water crisis to climate change. In Saint Lucia, climate pressure is no longer a distant warning. It is already showing up in extended dry seasons, unpredictable rainfall, stressed catchments, and damaged infrastructure.

That means pipeline replacement is not just maintenance. It is part of national adaptation. It is part of resilience. It is part of survival.

But let us also be honest: climate resilience cannot rest on pipelines alone. A complete water strategy must also involve:

  • better water storage,
  • stronger watershed protection,
  • household conservation,
  • community education, and
  • more practical support for rainwater harvesting.

In other words, climate change demands a whole-of-country response, not only a utility response.


6. Rainwater Harvesting – One of the Most Promising Ideas in the Speech

Among the most people-centered parts of the speech was the proposal to fund rainwater harvesting systems for vulnerable households. This is where the Minister tried to bring the macroeconomics of a regional loan down to the roof and yard level of ordinary citizens.

That idea deserves credit. In a small island state where weather patterns are becoming more unpredictable, helping vulnerable families capture and store water makes practical sense. It empowers households instead of leaving them completely at the mercy of national supply interruptions.

Still, some important questions remain:

  • How many families will benefit?
  • What standards will be used to define vulnerability?
  • Who will maintain the systems over time?
  • Will the rollout be national or politically selective?

This initiative could become one of the most practical and visible parts of the government’s water strategy — but only if it is implemented fairly, transparently, and sustainably.


7. Patience, Mon Repos, Praslin – A Long-Overdue Promise

The Minister then shifted to the Patience community water supply project in Micoud North, describing it as one of the worst-served areas in the country. Residents there have endured muddy water in the rainy season and dependence on trucked water in the dry season.

That is not just inconvenience. That is hardship. That is inequality in plain sight.

The government now says it is increasing the loan to get the project done, arguing that since the original costing in 2022, inflation, shipping, and material prices have all risen sharply. That explanation is believable in the current global climate. Infrastructure everywhere has become more expensive.

But again, increased costs must come with increased scrutiny. The public deserves to know: what changed, how much changed, and how the final cost will be controlled from here.

If this project truly delivers clean and reliable water to Patience, Mon Repos, and Praslin, it will be welcomed. But communities have waited too long for Saint Lucians to accept ceremonial language in place of concrete delivery.


8. A National Issue – Not Just a Northern Issue

One of the speech’s strongest messages was that the government has not forgotten communities outside the north. That matters. Because too often, national debates are framed around the areas with the largest population concentration while rural and southern communities quietly continue to struggle.

Here in the south, including in places like Choiseul and Saltibus, residents know all too well what inconsistent supply feels like. So while the focus on the north may be justified by the scale of the pipeline feeding 58% of the population, there remains a broader issue of fairness: when will every region feel the same seriousness of attention?

Saint Lucia’s water challenge is not a one-community problem. It is a national development problem.


9. Politics in Full Flow

No parliamentary speech is complete without politics, and this one had its fair share. The Minister repeatedly praised the Prime Minister, criticized the opposition, and framed the debate as a choice between a government of action and a past of neglect.

That may energize supporters, but the public mood in the country is often more practical than partisan. Most citizens are not measuring speeches by how sharply one side attacks the other. They are measuring by whether life is improving.

In the end, the average Saint Lucian is asking a simple question: Will this plan finally make water supply more reliable, or will it become another chapter in the long story of promises and pressure?


10. The Bigger Truth – WASCO Cannot Be Fixed by Resolutions Alone

The Minister presented the pipeline upgrade, the household rainwater systems, and the Patience project as signs that the government is finally starting to fix WASCO.

That may be true in part. These projects could indeed mark a serious start. But let us not fool ourselves: WASCO’s problems were not created overnight, and they will not be solved overnight.

The utility’s troubles are rooted in years of:

  • aging and corroded infrastructure,
  • high levels of non-revenue water,
  • financial stress,
  • management challenges, and
  • increasing climate pressure.

So yes, these resolutions may be a beginning. But a beginning is not the same as a solution.


Final Word – Water Is Life, But Delivery Is Proof

The Minister closed with a powerful phrase: “Water is life… Dlo se lavi .” On that point, there can be no debate.

Water is life for the mother trying to keep her home running. Water is life for the farmer watching the skies. Water is life for the child getting ready for school. Water is life for the elderly citizen who cannot haul buckets day after day. Water is life for the economy, for health, for dignity, for national resilience.

The government has now laid out its case. It says it has a plan. It says it is investing. It says it is repairing what was neglected. It says it is modernizing WASCO and building resilience for the future.

Those are serious promises. And because they are serious promises, they deserve serious public scrutiny.

In the end, Saint Lucians will not judge this moment by the force of the speech. They will judge it by the force of the results. When the next dry season bites, when the next strain comes, when the next family turns the pipe — will the water finally run?

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