South East Water under urgent investigation after 25,000 homes left without water

Residents have been warned outages could last until Friday
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Water regulator Ofwat has launched an investigation into South East Water after outages left thousands without drinking water supply across Kent and Sussex.
Outages have impacted tens of thousands of residents since November, with 8,500 locals still left without water this morning.
Some properties have been left without water for six days, leading to the watchdog investigating whether the supplier had met its customer service standards obligations and offered appropriate support to affected customers during supply failures.
Storm Goretti and a power cut at a pumping station sparked the latest supply issues on Saturday.
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South East Water said that some customers may not see supplies return until Friday.
Lynn Parker, Ofwat senior director for enforcement, said: "The last six weeks have been miserable for businesses and households across Kent and Sussex with repeated supply problem.
"We know that this has had a huge impact on all parts of daily life and hurt businesses, particularly in the run-up to the festive period.
"That is why we need to investigate and to determine whether the company has breached its licence condition."
Ministers are set to hold an emergency meeting after Tunbridge Wells MP Mike Martin put pressure on South East Water to take action.

Regulator Ofwat has launched an investigation into South East Water after outages have left thousands without drinking water supply
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Residents were forced to visit designated 'water collection points' pick up bottled water amid the shortage
|GETTY
Ofwat said it was concerned on Tuesday that around 23,000 properties were affected, and it had been declared a major incident earlier in the week.
While it was confirmed that water had been returned to 8,000 homes, thousands remained without, meaning they have endured almost one week without running water.
South East Water's incident manager Matthew Dean said: "Once again, we are very sorry to all our customers who have been affected.
"We know and understand how difficult going without water for such a long period of time is and how difficult it makes everyday life."

Thousands of bottles of water have been handed out
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A similar incident occurred just last month, when 24,000 properties in and around Tunbridge Wells were left without drinking water for nearly two weeks. November also saw water outages for thousands.
On Wednesday, GB News spoke to residents who had been left seething by the outage. One resident told the People's Channel that the utility provider is "rotten from top to bottom" and "not fit for purpose".
"We had two weeks with no water at all couldn’t even flush the toilet or drink anything," they said.
Another said: "We shouldn’t be allowing bonuses to be paid out of profits that actually haven’t been made.
"We’ve been suffering since before Christmas and it just disrupts our lives. My wife went to work today with no shower."
Mr Martin, a Liberal Democrat MP, has been calling for South East Water chief executive David Hinton to resign for weeks.
The Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey questioned Sir Keir Starmer in Prime Minister's Questions on the crisis on Wednesday.
He said the water firm "keeps failing its customers over and over again" and asked if the Government would "strip them of their licence".
The Prime Minister condemned the situation as "clearly totally unacceptable", adding that ministers have chaired daily emergency meetings during the crisis to "hold the company to account".
"'We've also doubled the compensation rates for individuals and businesses and we're absolutely clear the company must urgently invest in infrastructure and we'll publish the water White Paper in due course," he added.
Mr Hinton was grilled by MPs for his company's handling of the crisis last week.
Earlier this week, the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee said it was "deeply sceptical" of South East Water's versions of events, adding that they plan to recall Mr Hinton to provide further evidence
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