logo
Households to receive up to £2,000 compensation for water service failures

Households to receive up to £2,000 compensation for water service failures

Compensation payments will increase up to tenfold from July 2 for problems such as low pressure, disruptions to supply or sewer flooding.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said the move marked the first increase in compensation rates in 25 years in recognition of the 'urgent need' to bring payments in line with inflation and properly compensate households for poor service.
Severe issues such as flooding will see customer compensation double from £1,000 to up to £2,000, while households suffering consistent low water pressure will be automatically eligible to receive up to £250, up from the previous compensation rate of £25.
Payments will automatically be credited to the accounts of eligible customers with immediate effect.
The announcement comes as the Government attempts to grapple with the problems engulfing the water sector in the face of high public anger over the degraded and polluted state of rivers, lakes and coasts, rising bills, bosses' bonuses and shareholder payouts.
Environment Secretary Steve Reed said: 'Too many water companies are letting down their customers – with leaking pipes, poor water supply and low water pressure.
'The Government is holding water companies to account by making them put money back into people's pockets when they fail their customers.'
Defra said it was working with water companies to expand the list of circumstances that would trigger compensation payments.
Compensation for when customers are asked to boil their water due to contaminated supply will come into force later this year, it said.
The standards, outlined in the Guaranteed Standards Scheme, set out a baseline for customer service in the water sector and include providing timely restoration of water supply following an interruption, responding to written complaints and managing the risk of sewer flooding.
Action already announced to cut sewage spills and attract investment in the sector includes: strengthening regulation to ensure polluting water bosses who cover up their crimes now face two-year prison sentences; the banning of 'unfair' bonuses for bosses of six polluting water companies; and 81 criminal investigations into sewage pollution.
Mike Keil, the chief executive of the Consumer Council for Water (CCW), said: 'Customers expect to be treated fairly when their water company lets them down, so we're delighted the Government has moved at pace to strengthen service standards.
'This should give people peace of mind they now have far stronger protection from a much broader range of water company service failures – from the slow installation of water meters to the mishandling of debt recovery.
'As well as bolstering payments for thousands of customers, these changes mark an important step towards restoring trust in the water sector which is at an all-time low.'
Ofwat chief executive David Black said: ''We welcome these improvements to guaranteed standards and payments for customers.
'When customers suffer from problems like low pressure, disruptions to supply or sewer flooding, they can experience major stress and inconvenience, and payment amounts must recognise the disruption to their lives when standards are not met.
'These new changes are another way to make sure customers are protected when companies get it wrong.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tax agency deploys AI to monitor social media for tax fraud
Tax agency deploys AI to monitor social media for tax fraud

Daily Mail​

time9 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tax agency deploys AI to monitor social media for tax fraud

By It's the latest revelation of a government body using AI for its decision-making and processes. But if you abide by the rules you won't have to worry about AI snooping on your Instagram posts. The tax office is adamant AI tools are only used for social media monitoring in criminal investigations and with legal oversight. This isn't a new process – AI has been used to monitor social media accounts for 'years', HMRC says. But this fresh revelation has sparked a wave of concern from experts and politicians who say there is a risk AI could get it wrong - and accuse innocent households of evading tax, the Telegraph reports. An HMRC spokesman said: 'Use of AI for social media monitoring is restricted to criminal investigations and subject to legal oversight. AI supports our processes but – like all effective use of this new technology – it has robust safeguards in place and does not replace human decision-making. Greater use of AI will enable our staff to spend less time on administration and more time helping taxpayers, as well as better target fraud and evasion to bring in more money for public services.' AI is currently used to 'streamline' administrative tasks at the Revenue including internally using chat assistants to allow better access to information and also to summarise calls for advisers so they can cut down the time it takes to wrap up a call. It's thought the use of AI in the Revenue will become widespread on the quest to rake in more money as it was last month revealed AI tools will spread to 'everyday' tax processes. It is hoped this will pull in an additional £7billion for the tax office. One of HMRC's new processes will be using AI tools to identify suspected tax evaders and nudge them to pay what they owe. It says AI tools will allow its staff to focus on more complex work instead of replacing jobs – it says it will hire some 5,500 compliance staff.

Indonesia to crack down on illegal exploitation of resources, president says
Indonesia to crack down on illegal exploitation of resources, president says

Reuters

time39 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Indonesia to crack down on illegal exploitation of resources, president says

JAKARTA, Aug 15 (Reuters) - Indonesia will launch a broader crackdown on the illegal exploitation of natural resources after a survey of palm plantations found that 3.7 million hectares (14,300 square miles) had broken the law, President Prabowo Subianto said on Friday. He added that a total of 5 million hectares of palm plantations have been under scrutiny. He made the comments in his first state of the nation speech, delivered as the country - the world's largest producer and exporter of palm oil - celebrates 80 years of independence this weekend. Prabowo won the election last year, and took power in October. Prabowo, speaking in parliament, said the government had already seized 3.1 million hectares of illegal plantations with the help of the military. "We have used the military to accompany the teams that took over the plantations because there often is resistance," he said. He said his government is also planning a crackdown on mining, adding that they had received reports of as many as 1,063 illegal operations throughout the vast, mineral-rich archipelago. He did not specify what type of mines or the commodities they were extracting. Prabowo added that the government would take action against businesses found to be hoarding and exploiting key commodities in Indonesia. Large-scale rice mills would also be forced to obtain government permits to ensure rice quality and affordability, he said.

Readers' letters: Scottish Government's reaction to Gers figures stretches credulity
Readers' letters: Scottish Government's reaction to Gers figures stretches credulity

Scotsman

timean hour ago

  • Scotsman

Readers' letters: Scottish Government's reaction to Gers figures stretches credulity

A reader criticises the SNP for blaming the UK Government for Scotland's soaring public spending deficit Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Shona Robison states: 'Gers reflects the fact that the current UK Government has continued with the economic mismanagement of its predecessors.' She also blames the reduction in revenues from the North Sea. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad After 18 years of utter fiscal incompetence from the SNP, perhaps some of the dosh which has disappeared down the plug-hole needs stating. Stop all exploration in the North sea, destroying revenues, massive redundancies and huge losses in tax revenue. Free prescriptions, free university for the limited number of Scottish students allowed to enroll, free baby boxes, £400 million overspend on two ferries, free bus passes for under-22-year-olds, free school meals – the list is never ending. It would appear that the magic money tree (£2,699 of additional public spending compared to the UK average) is losing its leaves. The time has come to get rid of this SNP government. We have another nine months of financial incompetence to endure before the 2026 elections – what state will the nation's finances be in by then? I dread to think. When our pre-eminent national newspaper states with regard to Ms Robisons comments, 'In other words, the magic wand of independence will make our problems disappear', it is nothing short of a huge indictment of this government's ineptitude and utterly deluded means of governing. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad No wonder Nicola Sturgeon is thinking of jumping Hadrian's Wall – she won't be the only one should these indie zealots get their way. David Millar, Lauder, Scottish Borders Business as usual The publication of the latest GERS (Government Expenditure and Revenue for Scotland) figures has triggered a now traditional feeding frenzy. A black hole in Scotland's finances is heralded by unionist politicians as validating the continuation of the Union. The killer phrase for me from the GERS report is: 'The report is designed to allow users to understand and analyse Scotland's fiscal position under different scenarios within the current constitutional framework.' GERS is therefore a measure of the public finances under the current Union, hardly the greatest endorsement for how the economy has been managed on the UK's watch. Indeed, major economic levers required to stimulate economic growth are still currently reserved to Westminster. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Contrast this with our near neighbour, the Republic of Ireland, which has run budget surpluses totalling over £34 billion since 2022, with another forecast this year. Despite having considerably less in the way of natural resources than Scotland, the government there has announced a 'transformational' plan to spend over £183bn over the next decade on infrastructure. The point of independence is not to do everything in the same way as it has been done within the current constitutional framework, but to move away from this one-size-fits-all fiscal straitjacket to a tailored approach that prioritises stimulating economic growth. Alex Orr, Edinburgh Service sector The closing of churches (Letters, 14 August) is the business equivalent of sacking the sales force because business is bad. In both cases the answer is an updating of the product to make it more attractive to the customer. Malcolm Parkin, Kinnesswood, Perth & Kinross Covid claims I have to disagree with Martin O'Gorman's suggestion (Letters, 13 August) that Nicola Sturgeon 'weaponised Covid'. He gives no justification and for many she did the opposite. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Evidence suggests that she went out of her way to keep Scotland informed in her clear communicative style with press conferences daily to hold her and her government to account. This is a far cry from Boris Johnson, who flagrantly breached his own rules on several occasions and blustered through occasional press conferences with lies and, it transpired, put the economy before human life on occasion. In her candid interview with Julie Etchingham she covered at least as many misjudgments as successes. While there were the eight election victories, Sturgeon chose to talk about the dark and difficult realities in her troubled political life. The usual political answers were replaced by a frank admission that she had got things wrong in four key areas. Misjudging the mood of the nation in 2017 when 'caught off guard' by the scrutiny of a second referendum, feeling partly responsible for Covid deaths, losing her friendship with Alex Salmond and gender reform. Her reluctance to mark her performance out of ten may be because it is not for her to judge. Often we are quick to praise ourselves before others. I agree with Mr O'Gorman about a lack of political progress, Sturgeon cited only the child payment along with election successes as achievements. Ultimately she failed to deliver independence and that is how many will judge her. Neil Anderson, Edinburgh Stalinist tendencies Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Joanna Cherry accuses Nicola Sturgeon of having a Stalinist leadership style (Scotsman, 14 August).There seems little doubt that the SNP was run in an authoritarian style under Nicola, but to be fair, she inherited this from the previous leader Alex Salmond, in his drive for independence. William Ballantine, Bo'ness, West Lothian Orwell's critique In his defence of Nicola Sturgeon, Robert Menzies uses the term Orwellian (Letters, 14 August). I suggest that he reads Orwell's 'Notes on Nationalism', written in 1945. Orwell's wide-ranging critique starts by saying that nationalism assumes that human beings can be classified like insects, that whole blocks of millions or tens of millions of people can be confidently labelled 'good' or 'bad', and that the nationalist habit of identifying oneself with a single nation and placing it beyond good or evil recognises no other duty than advancing its interests. He goes on to say that the abiding interest of every nationalist is to secure more power, not for himself, but for the nation in which he has chosen to sink his own individuality. Of course Orwell's binary phraseology was written long before the gender wars had broken out, but I am sure that he would have fulminated against censorship and no-platforming with great vigour as matters of principle. Hugh Pennington, Aberdeen Never too late Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Murdo Fraser's throwaway sentence towards the end of his article about the 2025 Highers examinations (Scotsman, 13 August) stated that 'Young people get only one chance at education'. As one who spent 32 years in various further education colleges this does seem rather disrespectful to the sector. My favourite class over the years was a group of, mainly, 35-45-year-old housewives responding to an urgent invitation to train as teachers. I do not think that the school system had failed them; rather they were probably too immature at that time to gain full benefit. Often I was told by them that they had never understood Hamlet until they were given this second chance. Not my teaching, but their greater maturity and experience of life was what made the difference. Their lack of ego about their own ability was touching but led to my being asked frequently: 'Do you think I'll scrape a C pass?' There was never any doubt. And that's what those of us working in the sector always saw as its main priority – giving people a second chance. I even saw this in my own family when one my daughters, who had been pursuing City and Guilds qualifications in catering, took a government-sponsored basic computing course in my own college and progressed from there to a degree in computing at university and a very successful career. Bill Greenock, Netherlee, East Renfrewshire Forgotten Fleet National events are being held to mark the 80th anniversary of VJ Day today. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad For VJ Day 80, the government's website mentions the Fourteenth Army – the Forgotten Army – but not the British Pacific Fleet (BPF), the Forgotten Fleet. By VJ Day in 1945, the BPF consisted of 190,000 men and women, some 273 ships, more than 750 naval aircraft and bases ashore. The largest ever British fleet, it was supported by peoples of the Commonwealth in Australia, New Zealand, India and Ceylon. Sailors from many more nations served in Merchant Navy ships in the 'Fleet Train', and some foreign nationals were at sea with the Royal Navy and Royal Marines, all supporting America's huge Pacific naval forces. After Japan's surrender, the BPF was the only force immediately available to safeguard British and Commonwealth interests in the Pacific, carrying out humanitarian work, particularly with prisoners of war. My father's destroyer, HMS Wager, returned home after 18 months away in January 1946. In All Hell Let Loose, Sir Max Hastings suggests that 'the Royal Navy and the United States Navy were their countries' outstanding fighting services' of the war. Indeed, the Royal Navy was the only service in the world engaged from the first to the last day of the Second World War. Not just the Forgotten Fleet, today's sea-blind Britain has forgotten the importance of the sea and ships to our nation's livelihood. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Lester May (Lieutenant Commander, Royal Navy – retired), London Write to The Scotsman

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store