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Private Water Supplies (Grants) (Scotland) Regulations 2006
27 September 2007

The Private Water Supplies (Grants) (Scotland) Regulations
2006 (SSI/2006/210) came into force in July 2006.
These Regulations require that all private water supplies
are registered with the local authority where the source of
the supply is located. These water supplies are then classed
as either:
Type A supplies – Defined as those serving 50 or more
persons, and / or supplies to commercial or public
activities e.g. Hotel, B&B, Campsite”.
Type A supplies have to be monitored by the Local Authority
to ensure that they meet the requirements of the EU Drinking
Water Directive 1998 and the cost of the monitoring can be
recovered from those served by the supply. The local
authority will require any Type A supply not meeting the
required standard to be upgraded.
Type B Supplies – Defined as smaller, non-Directive supplies
(i.e. anything else)
Type B supplies are subject to ‘on-request’ monitoring of a
smaller set of quality measures (as detailed in The
Regulations) and the local authority can recover the cost of
such monitoring. The local authority will usually complete
an initial risk assessment to decide whether the work is
required and the application valid.
There is a grant available to meet the costs of improving
private water supplies. The grant is non-means tested and is
available to any residential home owner who has a private
water supply in need of improvement (Type A or Type B). The
grant is not available to public bodies, new buildings
(which are subject to sect. 73 of the 1980 Water Act) and
buildings which are due to be closed or demolished, are
dangerous, empty or unoccupied, or are below a tolerable
standard for a reason other than the quality of the water
supply. The grant is not available to properties that have
already received a grant to improve the water supply.
The grant can cover 100% of the proposed improvement works
(including the local authorities’ monitoring charges and
agent’s reasonable fees) up to a maximum of £800 per
residential property.
If one or more houses are on the same supply and all require
the supply upgrading, then they owners/occupiers can submit
a joint application for up to £800 each. For example, if
there are three adjoining houses all on the same supply,
they can band together to apply for up to 3 x £800.
The grant will cover any improvement work required, whether
it is new filters, new pipe work or even extension of a
borehole. However, the applicant will have to pay the
difference between the grant awarded and the cost of the
works. In exceptional cases, and where a hardship claim can
be proven, a grant of more than £800 may be awarded.
The grant will only be paid after the works have been
completed to the satisfaction of the local authority.
This grant should prove popular with estates and large farms
where the owner has several properties sharing the same
supply, as a joint application for all the properties
concerned can often accumulate sufficient grant to fund
large scale capital works such as renewing pipe networks or
even drilling a new borehole.
Further information can be found at:
http://www.privatewatersupplies.gov.uk

Gervase Topp, Aberdeen Office
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