Northland water crisis: Residents queue for laundromat and stockpile bottled water
17
January, 2016
Long-lines
are forming at Mangawhai's only laundromat and bottles of water are
flying out the door of its two general stores as desperate residents
try to secure supplies.
Tensions
are starting to run high in Northland as people continue to face long
waits for deliveries of tank water and the cartage firms remain under
the pump as the dry weather continues.
Molesworth
Four Square owner Kirk Mander said demand for 15-litre containers of
water had increased in the past two weeks. He had ordered extra
shipments to meet strong demand.
Sales
for every other item remained flat, but water had "shot up".
The
shortage was all customers were talking about, he said.
"I
think people are getting frustrated with no communication about when
they are getting water," Mander said.
Mander
said his own family had been out of water for about a week and almost
no one in the town was unaffected by it.
Mangawhai
Village Four Square store manager Prince, who only wanted to be
referred to as Prince, had ordered in an extra pallet for 10-litre
bottled water and had reduced the price from $8.99 to $6.99 to make
it more affordable for people.
"It's
the summer. Water is just flying out the door.
"Heaps
of people just want water, not really food."
The
Four Square also manages the laundromat and increased opening hours
and seen almost five times as many people topping up smart cards for
the washing machines than usual.
Laundromat
Mangawhai owner John Fredrickson said there were constant queues of
up to three people for each of the store's five washing machines and
the lines started from when the doors opened at 8am. The wait was
between 30 minutes to 2 hours for a machine.
The
laundromat drew from its own bore, but he was still stumped why with
Mangawhai's growing population Kaipara District Council did not have
one available in the town for tankers.
Fredrickson
owns a holiday home in the town and had been advised by the property
manager that they would have to cancel a booking because the tank was
low and the average wait for water was up to two weeks.
He
said cancelling bookings had left him about $4000 out of pocket.
Bach
Stay Mangawhai owner Matt Adams, who manages 70 properties in
Mangawhai, said they had only had to cancel one booking so far but
were monitoring tank levels and educating guests about water
conservation.
He
said in past years the local suppliers would be able to deliver water
within 24 hours, but even before Christmas there had been a
four-to-five-day wait.
"It's
only just the beginning of the problem. We've got about 45 to 50
houses booked and rented at the moment and we can't guarantee there
will be enough water in those tanks for the next two weeks. That will
be entirely dependent on the people staying there at present and
whether or not they are being careful or not."
Adams
thought the problem was exasperated by a lot of panic buying, with
people putting their names on the waiting list just in case.
Kaipara
District Council said its Mangutoroto water scheme was near capacity,
so was unable to offer a solution to Mangawhai carriers at this
stage.
Kaipara
District Council corporate services manager Peter Marshall said the
only other options to supplement the private bores were the filling
stations at Wellsford and Ruakaka, which was a 90 minute turn-around
for drivers.
"We're
looking at what other options we can provide but we haven't got any
specific ideas right now."
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