Residents Welfare Associations are critical and empowered players of water governance at the local level. The concluding part of the RWH series.
In the earlier parts of this series we have seen as to how in a layout context, the Resident Welfare Association (RWA) is the body that is aware of the issues that the residents face, can engage with the residents to identify appropriate solutions, can build consensus on issues/resolutions and enable the implementation of measures to ensure issue resolution. We have also discussed the relevance of Rainwater Harvesting (RWH) in the layout context, and dealt with FAQ’s on the same.
In this article we will see how the RWA can play the role of a 'Resource Manager' for water, assuming responsibility for the entirety of the water cycle within a layout – starting from production, supply, treatment/usage and discharge of sullied water, sale, billing and ensuring long term sustainability of the resource.
We shall now look at the regular functions that the RWA currently plays in managing the water supply and demand in its layout, and the visionary role it can play to ensure its long term sustainability.
1. Ensuring that the water demand of the layout is met.
In the absence of Cauvery water, the RWA has to look at a multiple sourcing strategy for water including bore wells and tankers. As Resource Managers, the RWA should consider the interrelationships between supply and demand for water so as to provide long term solutions that cater to both aspects of the issue. Some of the steps could be to:
2. Ensuring that the sewage generated by the layout is handled appropriately since the layout is not connected to the city sewerage network.
This involves the optimal running of a Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) as well as ensuring that the treated water from the STP is either used within the campus for lower grade uses (like landscaping and flushing of toilets) or is discharged safely outside the layout.
3. Utilising rainfall runoff from layouts which often end up flooding the basements or other lower level areas in the campus.
This flooding is either due to blocked storm water drains or due to the contours of the layout itself which does not provide for the runoff to make its way to the city's common storm water drain network. Though these flood prone areas do pose a problem in the short term they also present an excellent opportunity for recharge since large volumes of water can naturally be got at one source. Recharge wells in these low lying areas will ensure that most of the water that runs off the campus is used for ground water recharge.
4. Deciding on an appropriate tariff for water.
In order to do justice to the task of arriving at the water tariffs, the RWA needs to ensure that systems (presence of correctly installed water meters, staff to read and record the meter readings at regular intervals) are in place so that the water consumption of individual dwellings in the layout is known. The RWA needs to know the production/supply/treatment costs of water which include energy and maintenance costs for operating the bore well, costs for tanker water, operating/maintenance and energy costs for running a STP, cost of pumping water out from basements and low lying areas within the campus after a flood event, costs of maintaining a water man to read the water meters/ ensure that valves are appropriately opened/closed so that water is supplied to all homes and maintenance costs for common overhead tanks, sumps and distribution plumbing.
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