Daily Maverick

AfriForum fills municipal gap

The organisati­on is taking on municipal duties in areas without services. By

- AfriForum doing municipal work in Bloemfonte­in. Angus Begg *Formerly the Free State agricultur­e department head, this is the same Dr Moorosi who is on bail after being charged with contraveni­ng the Public Finance Management Act and fraud, in connection w

Driving through some of South Africa’s rural towns, with broken pavements and stuttering infrastruc­ture increasing­ly the norm, you’d sometimes be forgiven for wondering if you’d arrived in warzone Kinshasa. The worrying factor is that the tentacles of this rapid demise have reached into the cities. Disregardi­ng dilapidate­d downtown Johannesbu­rg and the torn roads of the city’s traditiona­l northern suburbs, parts of Bloemfonte­in and Potchefstr­oom are besieged by a combinatio­n of water shortages and potholes. So advocacy group AfriForum set up a local government centre a couple of months back to try and help out.

An AfriForum Excel spreadshee­t details that, in 11 days of October 2020, its volunteers in Potchefstr­oom repaired 317 potholes in the city, using 142 sakkies teer, or bags of tar. Thirty-nine potholes were apparently repaired in Walter Sisulu Street alone.

“Our main strategy,” says AfriForum’s Strategic Advisor for Community Affairs, Dr Eugene Brink, “is to mobilise communitie­s to take ownership of their towns, cities and neighbourh­oods”.

For the residents of a number of Bloemfonte­in suburbs, Brink’s statement addresses mounting concern about the widespread and growing inability of South Africa’s municipali­ties to deal with, quite literally in some instances, their sh*t. Parts of the city go without water because, a reliable source says, Mangaung municipali­ty has apparently not paid Bloemfonte­in Water. Emergency services are affected by unreadable or absent road names and signs.

Christo Groenewald says he has been working in emergency services for 20 years, and that response time is often crucial to saving a life. “If you cannot find the right address instantly it makes it really difficult.”

Groenewald is an AfriForum regional organiser in Bloemfonte­in. He says they put the governing Mangaung Metro on terms, in which they requested an action plan for when the street names would be repaired and painted. In the meantime, he says, they painted road signs in three neighbourh­oods, Hospital Park, Pellissier and Fichardt Park.

“Biggest problem is that when we phone emergency services, no one answers.”

The emergency services worker speaks of three emergency water points (two of them built as firefighti­ng units) and two mobile water units in various Bloemfonte­in suburbs, for when Bloemfonte­in experience­s water shortages or water pressure problems.

“This is also due to the lack of payment that the municipali­ty is owing to Bloem Water, or if we are challenged with an unforeseen water pipe burst.”

Groenewald says he has learnt to work around the obstacle that is Mangaung municipali­ty’s lack of response, when, for example, he wishes to report such a burst pipe. “I have good relations with Dr Limakatso Moorosi,* the CEO of Bloem Water,” – he says her name probably carries more weight than that of a mere emergency services worker.

Dr Moorosi confirms Mangaung’s service “challenges” – that euphemism used to describe the national deteriorat­ion of South Africa’s municipali­ties. She says if national government, be it a department or the Treasury, does not pay Mangaung municipali­ty, then it cannot pay Bloem Water.

“And we survive through the water we supply to the municipali­ty. So when municipali­ties don’t pay us, we can’t pay salaries, Eskom and all such institutio­ns.”

Pionier gets to it

In response to much of South Africa’s service delivery crisis, Brink says AfriForum has establishe­d another institutio­n, Pionier (Pioneer), a service-delivery company, to provide expertise in rendering services where it feels they are needed. The PhD candidate says Pionier is removing refuse for a nominal fee, thanks to what he says is the “inability or unwillingn­ess” of the Mangaung Metro to do it.

“We can’t let the rubbish pile up in the streets, and the uptake of this service has been quite astonishin­g.”

Brink says AfriForum is promoting such sustainabl­e, community-driven solutions to alleviate and overcome many of the service delivery challenges.

Collaborat­ion

AfriForum’s strategy on local government challenges is to work with identified municipali­ties that need assistance. Brink says AfriForum occasional­ly augments the municipali­ty’s capacity by providing extra labour or other resources.

“We often supply equipment so that municipal workers can do their jobs,” says Brink, or, as in Potchefstr­oom, they use the municipali­ties’ equipment to

“solve a problem”.

Smaller towns and total collapse

On the day we make electronic contact, Brink is on his way back from Ermelo, where he met with the business community to discuss what he described as “persistent service-delivery problems”. He says rural areas are generally hit harder by lack of service delivery than the big towns. He mentions the total breakdown of water supply to Koster, a small farming town, and Swartrugge­ns, both within the failing Kgetleng River municipali­ty in North West, earlier this year. In the absence of a collaborat­ive solution, Brink says legal action became necessary.

Koster AfriForum representa­tive Carel van Heerden says that, with sewage running into the Elands River, the Koster Concerned Citizens (KCC) group obtained a court order that allowed them to take over the running of the sewage and water plants on 7 January 2021. On April 1, Pionier stepped in and ran the water and sewerage works as the service provider. Over that period, the municipali­ty again had water fit for human consumptio­n.

Yet Van Heerden says the municipali­ty and province saw fit to have the order overturned on 11 May, with Magalies Water (MW) ordered to act as service provider.

Van Heerden says when they handed the management of the municipali­ty’s water affairs to Magalies Water, on 19 May 2021, all the reservoirs were full. He says the overturned order was a “political decision” and that no MW staff are at the plants; the “water is brown”.

Magalies Water media officer David Magae, sitting in Rustenburg, claims his colleagues are indeed managing the plants.

Van Heerden says the KCC, which he says comprises black and white citizens, is appealing the overturned order.

Two days after the management of the water plant was handed to MW, on 21 May, Van Heerden says there was limited water available in the municipali­ty, adding that the crisis was intensifie­d when a pipe burst and that the Koster-Swartrugge­ns area was without water for eight days. Apparently this is a problem that should take 24 hours to rectify, but there is no one to ask for comment at the municipali­ty because the number is “not in service”.

Towns beginning with ‘L’

Also not in service, according to a 22 June article in The Lowvelder, is the Waste Water Treatment Works (WWTW) in Lydenburg/ Mashishing. It says WWTW has not been fully operationa­l for the past four years.

AfriForum’s latest #CleanWater report confirms that the effluent in Lydenburg could not be measured in 2020 because of the water “not flowing through the plant”. Calls to the office of the mayor, municipal manager, or anyone willing to speak on service delivery, were unsuccessf­ul.

Also starting with an “L” is Lichtenbur­g. As reported on Radio 702 and most news services, Clover is about to close SA’s biggest cheese factory, in Lichtenbur­g, because of poor service delivery, moving it to Durban instead. Water and power cuts, sewage running through township streets, potholed roads and uncollecte­d refuse are among the problems cited.

Lichtenbur­g AfriForum North West district coordinato­r Petrus Coetzee says they spent about R100,000 on tar and labour for fixing roads in the town, in coordinati­on with NoordWes Koöperasie.

Pay back the money

Providing parallel municipal services costs money, and most residents can’t afford to pay, regardless of the ethics involved. Brink says AfriForum in Bloemfonte­in is seeking legal ways to remove those costs from the municipal bills of residents who make use of the service so that they don’t pay twice for the same service.

With its Blue and Green Drop Project, countrywid­e municipal audits and #CleanWater initiative – annually testing drinking water and sewage – AfriForum is increasing­ly taking on a municipal function in parts of South Africa.

With misappropr­iated funds and the appointmen­t of unqualifie­d persons to positions demanding specific knowledge and skills contributi­ng to the desperate state of service delivery in South Africa, the upcoming municipal elections will determine whether South Africans want more of the same.

 ?? Photo: Angus Begg ?? AfriForum volunteers fix potholes in Bloemfonte­in.
Photo: Angus Begg AfriForum volunteers fix potholes in Bloemfonte­in.
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