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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Paige Oldfield

Families left without running water for more than two months forced to shower in GARDEN

Families in Oldham have been left without running water for months – forcing one man to take showers in his GARDEN.

Residents living in Weeder Square, Shaw, say they are still waiting to be connected to a main supply 10 weeks after their water source dried up. The houses usually draw water from a nearby well.

The families have now gone more than two months without running water – leaving them no choice but to live off bottled water provided by United Utilities. Jean Mulhall, 88, says she has been prescribed anxiety medication over the ordeal following a decline in her mental health.

READ MORE: Mum-of-three left with £9 to look after family for a week after bank suddenly froze her account

"I'm nearly 89 - it's just hard. It's awful,” she told the Manchester Evening News. “I've been to the doctors and he's put me on some tablets to calm me down.

“It's terrible, my husband died in 2019 and it's so hard. During lockdown I was on my own all that time, the children came to see me but they're all on holiday at the moment.

The residents have been provided with bottled water (Kenny Brown | Manchester Evening News)

"I'm going up to my daughters to have a shower. Otherwise, I have to take a bowl of water upstairs and put in the bath, or stand in a bowl of water and have a shower.”

Jean says she has to carry a full bucket of water upstairs every time she needs to use the toilet. "We got a first lot of water then within a week they sent another big lot out,” she continued.

"It's hard because you have to boil pans of bottled water to wash up and then pour some of the bottled water to cool it down. Then when it's washed up, you put it in a bucket and take it up and put it in the loo but it doesn't even flush properly.

Jean Mulhall (Kenny Brown | Manchester Evening News)

“You're doing it loads of times. It's horrible - it's absolutely terrible."

Fellow resident Martin Fielding has also resorted to washing from a bucket – but sometimes showers in his garden by pouring bottled water over him. “During the heatwave I lay some bottles out and when they heated up, I stood out in the garden with a bar of soap,” he added. "We’ve got a 90-year-old woman who can't even get a drink of water.”

Glenice Summerscales, 79, says the situation has left her feeling as though she is just “existing”. "We're really upset it's taking so long and it's not even our fault,” she told the M.E.N. “I'm at my wits end - it's not worth getting up in the morning.

The residents are waiting to be connected to the pipes (Kenny Brown | Manchester Evening News)

"It's not worth getting out of bed. You get your feet on the floor and think, 'Oh God, I have no water for cleaning'.

"You can get up in the morning and use seven bottles. The water goes nowhere. “We use one two-litre bottle just on drinking water for our dog. We're not youngsters anymore and it's hard work, it's really hard work.

"I use mouthwash to rinse my mouth out after washing my teeth because there's no water. We have to boil hot water, put it in a bowl and then put cold water in and have a strip wash - that's all we can do. We must stink.

Glenice Summerscales (Kenny Brown | Manchester Evening News)

"When you're at our age, you want luxury. We did this when we were 10-years-old and that's what we've gone back to. They're not real people who run this world. It's all about money. It's horrendous - life is just not good. We're just existing.

"My hairdresser is supplying my water. I have to go to the laundrette twice a week. You can't imagine the sympathy we've had off people.”

Glenice’s husband Jim, 83, is also currently having to wash from a bucket of water. "We shouldn't have been left like this,” he added. “It's been terrible, we have to wash out of a bucket of water.

Jim Summerscales (Kenny Brown | Manchester Evening News)

"It's not been easy at all. The thing I miss the most is the shower. Last weekend it started raining and we thought, 'Hip hip hooray,' then it dried up again. We're praying for rain. I was doing a rain dance the other night."

United Utilities said delays to the connection work has been caused by faulty pipework.

Resident Martin Fielding (Kenny Brown | Manchester Evening News)

A United Utilities spokesperson said: “We understand the frustration the residents have at the time it has taken to try and be connected to the mains network. Unfortunately, the pipework laid out by the private contractor requires significant remedial works before it can be connected to the water main.

“We are continuing to work closely with the residents and contractor to provide assistance to ensure this issue is resolved as quickly as possible.”

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