Image source, Chrissie Reidy/BBC
Two water stations reopened in Tunbridge Wells on Sunday
ByStuart Maisner
South East
Thousands of households and businesses in Kent are experiencing water supply issues for a second day.
South East Water (SEW) said on Sunday that up to 7,000 properties face low pressure, no water, or intermittent supply due to a temporary instrument failure at its Tunbridge Wells water treatment works.
The company, which has been heavily criticised for multiple supply failures in recent months, apologised to customers and said two bottled water stations were open in the town for a second day.
Lance Miles, who lives in Tunbridge Wells and is registered disabled, described SEW as "incompetently useless".
"Yet again we are without water," he told the BBC.
"We're not customers, because customers have a choice. We don't have a choice.
"If there was another company, at the drop of a hat I would go with that company."
Image source, Getty Images
Thousands of properties across Tunbridge Wells were affected by water disruptions in January
A SEW spokesperson said the water treatment works were "now stable".
They added: "Low storage levels from this disruption and high demand mean we cannot pump water to some areas, particularly on higher ground.
"To ensure a stable, continuous flow, we must allow tanks to replenish."
SEW added that it was continuing to deliver bottled water to customers from the priority services register, a free support scheme for people who need extra help.
The bottled water stations that have reopened on Sunday are at Tesco Superstore on Pembury Road and Tunbridge Wells Rugby Club.
Mike Martin, Tunbridge Wells MP, wrote on X on Sunday morning that the rugby club station had run out of bottled water.
Image source, BBC/Chrissie Reidy
This is the third major incident in Tunbridge Wells in recent months
Earlier this week, the water company was ordered to spend £30.5m on improvements after investigations by industry watchdog Ofwat.
SEW warned in its annual report this week that it needed to secure fresh financing to stay afloat after taking a £55m hit from outages over the winter.
The water supplier to around 2.3 million customers in the south east of England said it was in discussions with lenders to agree a new loan facility.
SEW has been under intense scrutiny since November, when 24,000 customers lost water supply or pressure in the Tunbridge Wells area.
Customers were then advised to boil their water before consumption for a nine-day period after supply returned.
Weeks later, about 30,000 households in Kent and Sussex faced days of supply issues, which bosses blamed on freezing temperatures and Storm Goretti.
The company announced its chair had departed and its chief executive would also leave following the earlier failures.
Paul Sparrow, another Tunbridge Wells resident, told the BBC: "It's hard to know what to say. We've had years of underinvestment."
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