⚠ Confidential — Pilot Intelligence Summary — Methodology Withheld Pending Funded Agreement
This report documents the first 16 community-generated water signal reports collected between May 15–June 2, 2026 across Grenada parishes. Data was submitted voluntarily by residents through the Water Signal Tracker™ community reporting platform. This pilot demonstrates the existence of a critical real-time water intelligence gap between utility-declared schedules and actual household-level water access — a gap this system is uniquely designed to close.
Total Reports
16
May 15–Jun 2, 2026
Parishes Covered
2
St. George's · St. John's
No Water Reports
9
56% of all submissions
Critical Duration
4
7+ days or over a month
Key Signal Findings
01
St. George's is the Crisis Concentration Zone
15 of 16 reports (94%) came from St. George's parish. 6 communities reported zero water access — not reduced supply, zero access. This confirms St. George's as the highest-pressure failure zone in the current outage cycle.
02
Elevation Drives Severity — Hilltop Communities Hit Hardest
100% of "No Water" reports came from hilltop or hillside communities. Mt. Parnassus, St. Paul's, La Borie, and Morne Delice — all elevated — reported the longest durations without water. This confirms the pressure-zone imbalance pattern predicted by infrastructure analysis.
03
Duration Severity Is Alarming — "Over a Month" Reports Documented
3 reports documented water outages exceeding one month across Morne Delice and La Borie. This exceeds routine dry season management and signals a systemic supply failure, not a temporary valve regulation event.
04
Notice Accuracy Gap Confirmed
NAWASA's published valve regulation schedule declared supply availability from 5:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. daily. Community reports submitted during that window show zero water access — confirming a measurable gap between declared supply and actual household delivery.
05
Flatland Communities Show Mixed Results
Calliste (flatland) reported weak pressure while River Road (flatland) reported normal flow — confirming that proximity to supply source and pipe routing, not elevation alone, affects distribution. This data point supports pressure-zone engineering as a targeted intervention.
06
NAWASA Proactive Outreach Confirmed — Reactive Delivery Model Documented 💧 Outreach Recognized
On May 29, 2026, a Morne Delice resident reported that NAWASA contacted them directly by phone to offer a water truck delivery — tank or barrel top-up by delivery truck. This is a significant operational intelligence finding. It confirms that NAWASA has awareness of supply failures at the community level and is managing them through reactive delivery rather than supply restoration. The gap is not knowledge — it is operational response design. Water delivery by truck is a temporary mitigation measure, not a systemic solution. This finding distinguishes the Morne Delice situation from an unacknowledged infrastructure failure and points directly to a need for a permanent operational intelligence layer to support proactive distribution planning.
07
June 2 — Manual Valve Control Confirmed at Morne Delice
On June 2, 2026, Morne Delice documented three separate supply events in a single day — 10:40 AM (pulsating/intermittent), 2:30–4:30 PM (trickle, 2 hours), and 8:00–10:00 PM (strong flow, 2 hours then off). Strong pressure at 8:00 PM followed by complete cutoff at 10:00 PM confirms manual valve operation — not a pressure or infrastructure failure. Water supply is physically available but being restricted at the valve level. This distinguishes the Morne Delice situation from an infrastructure failure and points directly to an operational scheduling gap.
Full Signal Feed — 16 Community Reports
| Community |
Parish |
Status |
Duration |
Elevation |
Date |
| Mt. Parnassus | St. George's | No Water | 7+ days | Hilltop / Hillside | May 15 |
| Calliste | St. George's | Weak Pressure | 1–3 days | Flatland | May 15 |
| Laborie | St. George's | No Water | 4–7 days | Flatland | May 15 |
| St. Paul's | St. George's | No Water | 7+ days | Hilltop | May 15 |
| Morne Delice | St. George's | No Water | Over a month | Hillside | May 15 |
| Gouyave | St. John's | Normal Flow | Less than 1 day | Hillside | May 17 |
| Happy Hill | St. George's | Normal Flow | — | Hillside | May 17 |
| La Borie | St. George's | No Water | Over a month | Hilltop | May 17 |
| La Borie | St. George's | No Water | Over a month | Hilltop | May 17 |
| La Mode / St. George's Estate | St. George's | Intermittent | 1–3 days | Not confirmed | May 22 |
| River Road | St. George's | Normal Flow | Less than 1 day | Flatland | May 22 |
| Morne Delice |
St. George's |
Partial — 3H |
3 hours only 3:00 PM–6:00 PM AST |
Hillside |
May 31 |
| Morne Delice |
St. George's |
NAWASA Outreach |
Over a month NAWASA called offering water truck delivery |
Hillside |
May 29 |
| Morne Delice |
St. George's |
Pulsating / Trickle |
Trickle of water 10:40 AM AST · Off/on pressure · First flow since May 28 |
Hillside |
Jun 2 |
| Bay Gardens |
St. George's |
No Water |
4–7 days |
Hillside |
Jun 1 |
| St. Paul's |
St. George's |
No Water |
Less than 1 day |
Hilltop |
Jun 2 |
Community Voice — Direct Submissions
"This is inhumane and needs to be a State of Emergency."
Morne Delice, St. George's — Over 1 month without water · Hillside elevation
"This is inhumane & unsanitary."
St. Paul's, St. George's — 7+ days without water · Hilltop elevation
"We need that water it's very hard."
La Borie, St. George's — Over 1 month without water · Hilltop elevation
"Water comes every other day or two, sometimes for a few hours or the entire time. Pressure is usually normal, with some days being a bit low."
La Mode / St. George's Estate — Intermittent supply · May 22, 2026
Longitudinal Field Documentation — Morne Delice
The following longitudinal field documentation from Morne Delice, St. George's (Hillside elevation) represents the most detailed single-community water access record in this pilot. It reveals a pattern that goes beyond seasonal shortage — exposing an undisclosed valve rotation cycle delivering critically insufficient supply windows to affected households.
19-DAY SUPPLY TIMELINE — MAY 15–JUNE 2, 2026
No Water
Water 24H
Partial Window (3H)
Pattern confirmed and escalating: 2 full-day supply windows + multiple short windows across 19 days. June 2 alone documented three separate supply events at Morne Delice — 10:40 AM (pulsating/intermittent), 2:30–4:30 PM (trickle, 2 hours), and 8:00–10:00 PM (strong flow, 2 hours then off). Strong pressure followed by complete cutoff confirms manual valve control — not infrastructure failure. Supply is available but being restricted. Cycle interval remains 6–7 days for sustained flow. Short windows are increasing in frequency but not duration.
Pattern Analysis
Status Distribution
- No Water / Outage Context
- Normal Flow
- Partial / Intermittent
- Weak Pressure
Elevation vs. Severity
- Hilltop → No Water
- Hillside → Mixed
- Flatland → Mixed
Community Impact Duration™ History
Community Impact Duration™ measures the documented length of a disruption cycle from first confirmed community signal to restoration. Each event is logged here as a permanent record of impact — the gap between declared service and actual household access.
+
Future disruption events will be logged here as the platform scales across all 6 parishes.
This Is a 90-Day Pilot. The Intelligence Layer Is Live.
Water Signal Tracker™ is currently collecting community data across Grenada parishes at no cost to government or utility partners. This report represents the first evidence summary period. A funded 90-day pilot would expand coverage to all 6 parishes, produce monthly intelligence reports, and build the evidentiary foundation for infrastructure intervention and resilience investment.