Flood victims' anger at 'empty water bowsers'

Accessibility Menu

Flood victims' anger at 'empty water bowsers'

Published by webmaster for 24dash.com in Communities
Thursday 26th July 2007 - 9:17am

One woman managed to fill just a quarter of a four litre bottle One woman managed to fill just a quarter of a four litre bottle

Other Communities stories

People waiting to collect water from bowsers today warned that patience was wearing thin as many were again empty this morning.

More than 1,000 of the mobile water tanks have been sited across Gloucester, Tewkesbury and Cheltenham, where 140,000 homes had been left without running water.

But despite the prime minister's pledge yesterday that there would be more bowsers and water tankers hitting the streets there was little sign of improvement today.

One woman managed to fill just a quarter of a four litre bottle and said she would have to spend most of the day coming back and forth hoping the bowser near her home had been refilled.

Standing in torrential rain on Bristol Road, just a mile from the city centre, she said: "I came down here five times yesterday and there was nothing. My neighbours said they saw a builder's lorry come and take away ten gallons.

"We can't put up with much more of this.

"We've got jobs and we can't spend all day looking for water."

On the Coney Hill estate, residents complained that bowsers had not been filled since Monday and claim local youths had been vandalising the units as soon as they were replenished.

Mother-of-four Jean Goddard, 40, said there was now nowhere locally she could go for water.

"If you're on a low income or a single mum you can't get to the supermarkets for bottled water.

"There's only a couple of bowsers for this entire estate of hundreds of homes and they're empty. Kids keep vandalising them and leaving the taps on or breaking them off. I've heard kids have also been urinating in the bowsers. It's disgusting.

"People are getting very angry because they can't get water. I don't know why Severn Trent can't drop off bottled water at the end of streets."

Ms Goddard said she had been using water from her garden pond to flush the toilet and been filling wheelie bins from a local brook.

Others on the estate also said they'd seen workmen turning up in vans and lorries and draining the bowsers.

Copyright Press Association 2007

Don't miss the 24dash.com audio bulletins for the latest news and information - http://www.24dash.com/podcasts

Comments

No comments yet...

Be the first and post your views below.

Please Login to comment

To comment you must be logged in. You can either Login or Register

LATEST #ukhousing TWEETS

FACEBOOK RECOMMENDATIONS

Latest jobs

Latest jobs

Find and search more jobs in our Jobs Site...

Latest 24dash poll

Can social landlords provide broadband for tenants without state funding?


previous polls Previous polls

Latest blog posts

Lynne Featherstone

"Mike tells Boris what he things of his piddling cut in council tax!"

Published by Lynne Featherstone

Mike Tuffrey always did have a way of telling it like it is. In my day on the London Assembly it was Ken on the...

Anne Rowlands

"Size, it's all relative"

Published by Anne Rowlands

I found myself agreeing with the findings of the recent Chartered Institute of Housing report - Does size matter - or...

Andy Boddington

"Janet Street-Porter is right about Willy Wonka managers at the BBC but so wrong about local radio"

Published by Andy Boddington

In today’s Independent on Sunday, col