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FM
Former Member

Faecal coliform found in GWI’s water – PUC

The Public Utilities Commission (PUC) has released its 2015 Annual Report and is calling on the Guyana Water Incorporated (GWI) to step up efforts to have faecal coliform eliminated from its water supply network. gwi
According to the PUC in the report, GWI submits its monthly water quality test results to the Commission, which randomly selects samples from 24 locations and compared the test results to the standard set by the World Health Organisation (WHO).
The Commission outlined that the test results for pH, Iron, turbidity, aluminium, colour, chlorine residual, total coliform and faecal coliform were compared with the WHO standards and revealed that GWI was close to achieving all of the standards with the exception of faecal coliform.
“Faecal coliform by its very nature is hazardous to health and a greater effort is required by GWI to achieve compliance with this standard,” the PUC remarked in its report as reinstated its committed to monitoring the water quality standards.
The Commission added that GWI had committed to achieving the WHO bacteriological standards within six months for coastal water supplies and within 12 months for hinterland water supplies as stated in the GWI licence which was issued on November 13, 2002. This licence has since expired and the company and the stakeholder should make all efforts to ensure that the company is operating with a licence.
Back in October, the PUC had ordered GWI to halt its usage of a potentially dangerous chemical – Antinfek – for countrywide water treatment purposes, “until a full and comprehensive review by an external agency confirms that it is compatible with existing safety standards.”
Guyana Times had first reported that GWI was using the chemical, which not only Haiti refused to use but is without certification from the US National Sanitation Foundation (NSF) and failed to demonstrate its ability to meet the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) limited protection microbiological performance targets.
Additionally, Director of the Government Analyst Food and Drug (GA-FDD) Marlan Cole told another section of the media that the Antinfek chemical has negative reviews and has also not been tested or certified by the GA-FDD.
But GWI said the chemical is not dangerous, pointing out that it was tested by a number of other laboratories in Hong Kong, China, Thailand, Switzerland, Ghana, Nigeria, India, Pakistan, Kenya, Trinidad and Tobago and Germany, all showing favourable results in its use.
Meanwhile, the PUC in its annual report has suggested that the company uses a new technology being adopted by utilities companies around the world to effect disconnections and reconnections. The Commission said during ongoing research it became aware of the “Rye Ball Valve”.
The PUC explained that this device is a right angle lockable ball valve that is attached to the consumers’ main to effect a disconnection. It carries the added feature of a seal which when in place ensures that the consumer could only be illegally reconnected by breaking the seal.
“This acts as a deterrent to illegal reconnections which is a problem currently faced by GWI. The Commission has forwarded this information to GWI and hopes the company may find it practical and useful,” the Commission stated.

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Faecal Coliform

Fecal coliform bacteria are the most common microbiological contaminants of natural waters. Fecal coliform live in the digestive tracks of warm-blooded animals, including humans, and are excreted in the feces.

FM

In other words the Guyanese Public has been given shit water to use and drink or so it would seem,  by the Guyana Water Authority yet now  these scum bags are taxing that water for which there might still be that bacteria
How much worse can they get?

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Drugb posted:

How the heck did pnc stooge Django miss this one? He only reporting good news.

It's understood why you are a person with severe mental retardation.

A metal that can cause cancer was found in the drinking water of counties across New York and New Jersey, according to a report released Tuesday.

Hexavalent chromium, which was featured in the movie "Erin Brockovich," is in the drinking water of 218 million people across the country at levels higher than recommended by some scientists, according to the Environmental Working Group report. The metal, also known as chromium-6, could lead to 12,000 cases of cancer nationwide.

Source

Mitwah

Guyanese should show at Ramjattan's and Moses doorstep on Christmas morning with a glass of this filthy water.

After all, they promised to become a champion of the people.

PNC Ko Ko Beah spreads on Christmas morning.

FM

Like you forget how back in the days you drank pond and trench water. Your Vaughn water might be contaminated too since your source is primarily well water that can be affected by runoffs from the nearby farms.

Mitwah

Come on Mits, the government of Guyana is suppling water with Faecal Coliform. This is unacceptable.

Stop defending this and please call for action to be taken. That would become a better approach.

FM
skeldon_man posted:
Mitwah posted:

Yugi, what is the source of the Faecal Coliform?

Nagamottoo, Ramjattan, Joe Harmon and Granja.

These fellows seems to be taking their daily bowel movements in the people water supply. 

FM
yuji22 posted:

Come on Mits, the government of Guyana is suppling water with Faecal Coliform. This is unacceptable.

Stop defending this and please call for action to be taken. That would become a better approach.

Give them credit for testing the water to discover this contamination. Do you have evidence that this test was being done under the previous regime?

Mitwah
Regardless whether u live in a long yard or a castle as yugi does, which he reminds us of often, the water from our taps is never good. Nowhere in Ontario nor the rest of Canada do I drink straight from the tap, our water has loads of substances we should not ingest. The only way to beat this is to test for everything and doing it in a timely and cost effective manner.
cain

I haven't heard much change since.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...ntaminants-1.3111908

Many Canadian cities are falling short of testing drinking water for all possible harmful contaminants, and experts say the long-term consequences could be detrimental to people's health, a CBC News investigation has found.

CBC asked 18 cities in every province and territory to provide a list of the health-related contaminants they test in their water supplies. Only one — Ottawa — tests for all 75 substances found in Health Canada's published guidelines for Canadian drinking water. 

Some cities, like Calgary, Edmonton and Halifax, test for all but one of the substances in the guidelines. Quebec City tests for 62, Regina 52, Winnipeg 49, St.John's 26 and Iqaluit just tests for 20.

Experts say these voluntary national guidelines should be mandatory and enforceable, as they are in the U.S. and many other countries.

Eva Pip

Eva Pip, a University of Winnipeg professor, specializes in water quality and toxicology. (Holly Caruk/CBC)

In Canada, it is left to each province to decide how many tests each of its municipalities should do — a system Health Canada said makes sense based on which contaminants are relevant in any particular region.

"They should be testing for everything, maybe not all the time, but at least on a periodic basis, rather than never testing for them at all," said Eva Pip, a University of Winnipeg professor specializing in water quality and toxicology.

"There is no such thing anymore as a pristine environment anywhere on this planet," said Pip.

cain
Last edited by cain

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