Showing posts with label Municipalities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Municipalities. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Human Waste In Rivers Used To Irrigate Crops In South Africa

Bacteria-riddled river water used to irrigate most fresh produce in South Africa poses an extreme health risk.

The river water contains levels of E.coli bacteria that are as much as 10 000 times more than allowed by the World Health Organisation and the Department of Water Affairs, according to a study report obtained by The Times.
Not only is this dangerous for people but it might have a highly damaging effect on this country's international trading status and cause a suspension of exports of fruit and vegetables, the report warns.
The extensive research project was launched in 2007 amid growing concern that South African river water used for irrigating crops no longer met export standards set by the EU for fresh produce, or international health standards.
Professor Trevor Britz, of the food sciences department at Stellenbosch University, who led the R5-million study commissioned by the National Water Research Commission, called the situation "dangerous".
"If you fall into that water, you will die," he said of some rivers.
Microbial samples were taken from rivers regularly used to irrigate agricultural produce, such as the Eerste, Plankenbrug, Mosselbank and Berg rivers in Western Cape, the Baynespruit River in KwaZulu-Natal, the Mutshedzi River in Limpopo, the irrigation canal from Loskop Dam, the Olifants and Wilge rivers in Mpumalanga, Skeerpoort in North West and Gauteng's Klip River.
The rivers tested run through major agricultural communities such as Mpumalanga's Groblersdal - where citrus, table grapes, maize, wheat, vegetables, sunflower seeds, peanuts, lucerne and peaches are grown - and Stellenbosch, where grapes, pears, citrus, lettuces, strawberries, peppers, herbs and green beans are at risk.
Farmers pump water direct from the rivers and, without treating it, irrigate crops.
Researchers found that:
Human excrement, in particular, is severely polluting rivers;
In the Plankenbrug and Mosselbank rivers, near Stellenbosch, high concentrations of faecal indicators were present in more than 70% of the samples, and to a lesser extent in the Eerste and Berg rivers;
Concentrations of more than 1million microbes per 100ml of water were often measured. This compares with WHO and Department of Water Affairs guidelines, which state that levels of E.coli in irrigation water should not exceed 1000 per 100ml;
More than 30 types of bacteria and 180 phenotypic variations of E.coli were found; and
Other potential pathogens, such as staphylococci (responsible for food poisoning), Klebsiella (respiratory infections), Listeria (listeria infections) and salmonella (food poisoning, diarrhoea and kidney failure) were also found.
E.coli infections can lead to diarrhoea, dehydration and, in extreme cases, kidney failure and death.
Britz advised consumers to wash fruit and vegetables in sterilising fluid before eating them.
He said the risk of an infection from contaminated fresh produce could be illustrated by the 2011 E.coli outbreak in Europe, which resulted in at least 50 deaths and more than 4000 people becoming seriously ill.
In that instance, Germany had imported bean sprouts irrigated with contaminated water in Spain.
Many of the rivers tested in the South African survey are used daily by thousands of people for water sports and fishing. Some communities use the water for bathing and drinking.
Britz said "the whole" of Stellenbosch, and especially communties downstream from the town - including wine farms - were exposed to contaminated water from the Plankenbrug River.
In Mpumalanga, Groblersdal is fed by water from the Loskop Dam and vast crops of vegetables are irrigated with polluted water.
In a separate study of the Vaal River, high levels of E.coli were found in the dry months, but the bacteria were washed away during the rainy seasons, Britz said.
The pollution was caused by the poor management of sewage-treatment facilities, which leaked raw sewage into the rivers, as well as by the lack of ablution facilities in informal settlements, he said.
Popo Maja, spokesman for the Department of Health, said it had not examined the study results.
Sputnik Ratau, spokesman for the Department of Water Affairs, said that his department would respond after studying the report. "We shall interrogate the contents, also considering our normal inspections of river health and work of the Blue Scorpions."

Monday, July 8, 2013

State Coffers Bled

Nearly R1-billion lost through fraud in the public service has not been recovered.

Government departments have managed to get less than R1-million back into the state's coffers.
The Public Service Commission has found that the public service lost R932.3-million to financial misconduct in the 2010-2011 financial year.
According to the commission, misconduct relates to theft, mismanagement, misappropriation and abuse of funds, fraud, corruption and gross negligence.
North West - where fighting between rival factions in the ruling ANC is rife - was the worst offender.
Financial misconduct by public servants cost the province R 673 821 980.45, but the authorities managed to recover only R 4 530.00
Limpopo, which had several departments placed under administration by the cabinet, performed much better than North West.
Financial misconduct cost it R 16 123 114.64 - but only a measly R 1 367.37 was recovered.
Figures for the 2011-2012 financial year show that the cost of financial misconduct has dropped dramatically to R230-million but cases monitored by the commission rose to 1243 - up from 1035 the year before.
In 2011-2012, departments in Gauteng misused R14-million of public money.
Only R 27 000.00 has been recouped to date.
Gauteng flushed away R 18 463 258.00 and recovered a mere R 4 259.00
Public Service Commission member Mike Seloane said the drop can be attributed to two factors.
"The systems are becoming effective or departments are simply not declaring financial misconduct. There are departments that have declared no financial misconduct," he said.
The commission will launch an inquiry into the reasons for the low rate of recovery of misused public money.
In addition to financial misappropriation, the commission observed that efforts to deal with the problem were being frustrated by political heads of department.
It expressed displeasure at the "reluctance by departments to disclose fully the financial misconduct cases".
And it noted that there were "no concrete plans to ensure that money lost to the state was recovered fully".
The report detailing the latest national financial misconduct figures is expected to be published and presented in parliament in August or September.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

R12m in McBride legal fees

09 September, 2011




Ekurhuleni must be reimbursed the R12 million used to pay for the metro's former police chief Robert McBride's legal fees, the DA said on Friday.

"These expenses were in contravention of the Municipal Finance Management Act, the Municipal Systems Act and council's own policy, which stipulates that council may only pay up to R10 000 of an employee's legal costs, if the case is of relevance to the municipality," said the Democratic Alliance's Ekurhuleni councillor Michele Clarke.

The DA would hold the ANC, all councillors involved and former city manager Patrick Flusk accountable for the money.

"These were the people that were directly responsible for the Ekurhuleni metro paying for McBride's' legal costs, and they should answer for their decisions."




The DA wanted the ANC to table a report to the council showing how the money would be reimbursed.

"We also want an item tabled indicating when and how the municipality will take legal action in accordance with the advice obtained from the KwaZulu-Natal Law Society."

She said the society had advised Ekurhuleni to take legal action against McBride's attorneys, as their fees had been inflated.

Ekurhuleni mayoral spokesman Zweli Dlamini said the city would only follow up on the reimbursement of the legal fees after the outcome of McBride's appeal.

"It would be premature to demand to be reimbursed now when [McBride] said he would appeal the sentence."

The council took a resolution that should McBride lose the case, the city would recover all the legal fees, said Dlamini.

The Pretoria Magistrate's Court sentenced McBride to five years imprisonment on Thursday. He got two years for driving under the influence of alcohol and five years for defeating the ends of justice, of which two years were suspended for five years.

http://www.timeslive.co.za/local/2011/09/09/ekurhuleni-owed-r12m-in-mcbride-legal-fees

Saturday, May 28, 2011

R200m Spent on 'dodgy' Municipal Tenders

2011-05-27 

The Gauteng government has identified five "questionable" tenders in municipalities in the province worth around R200 million, the DA said on Friday.

This information was provided in response to an oral question submitted to Premier Nomvula Mokonyane in the legislature by the party, DA member of the provincial legislature and housing spokesperson Janet Semple said.

 





Janet Semple said the DA had asked whether any municipality in the province was mentioned in an auditor general report on municipalities DA leader Helen Zille wanted made public before the recent local government elections.

 



Semple said they were told that "irregular expenditure" in 



Tshwane metro municipality was R165 414 911

Kungweni local municipality R25 969 162

Ekurhuleni metro municipality R2 285 366 

West Rand district municipality R3 106 515

Emfuleni municipality R21 250.

"This is a mammoth total of R196 797 204.00 of taxpayers's money that was spent on questionable tenders and contracts. 

Reasons given by government for this wasteful expenditure are not clear," Semple said in a statement.

She later said, "The premier made no commitment to follow up on irregularities, but we will be pushing for it to be followed up."




Africa Boso, spokesperson for Auditor General Terence Nombembe, said the AG was finalising the report and it would be tabled in Parliament in mid June or the end of June.

Comment from the premier's office and further details of the tenders were not immediately available.


http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/Politics/R200m-spent-on-dodgy-municipal-tenders-20110527

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Rising water table flooding Joburg

2011-05-25

All eyes on government to see how they are going to solve this problem. My guess is they'll hold a summit at Sun City - which would cost the taxpayer about R60 000. They'll then realise that this problem does not really exist and is something the media cooked up to make them look incompetent. If however, it is proven that the problem is in fact a real one it will be blamed on Apartheid.






Johannesburg - Roads and properties in Johannesburg are becoming flooded from the rising water table, the Star reported on Wednesday.

Underground water was seeping through the roads and causing huge sinkholes and flooding neighbouring properties, according to the newspaper.








Residents were resorting to installing drainage systems at a cost of about R250 a running metre.

If they did not install them, water could get into the foundations of their houses and start eroding them, said Johannesburg Roads Agency (JRA) engineer Andre Nel.

He said the surface water was caused by rain water seeping into underground layers of soil.

It was trapped by a rocky layer, could not seep any deeper, and resulted in a rising of the water table.

The affected areas included Parkwood, Orange Grove and Houghton, Eldorado Park, Roodepoort, Randburg, Soweto and Lenasia.

The JRA would install drainage systems on roads, but did not work on private properties.


The summit at Sun City - which would cost the taxpayer about R2.600000 only followed by snacks off the bellies of naked women.

But wait, you forgot about the delegation that gets sent overseas -( 1st class air tickets/ 5 star hotels ) to find out how first world countries do it- Oh , and to catch up on some shopping and eating at the finest restaurants. I assume your R60,000 budget for Sun City is per head .

.......at the end of the summit it will be decided that the people owning / renting the properties must sort it out themselves. 

Actually, they will hold a summit, do nothing after a 600K sushi party and then publish their success story in the new states newspaper they are launching. The media says nothing because they are gagged by the information bill.
http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Rising-water-table-flooding-Joburg-20110525

R12bn needed to fix N West roads

2011-05-25

Johannesburg - About R12bn is needed to repair and upgrade roads in the North West over the next five years, the North West Business Forum said on Wednesday.










However, there would be an annual funding shortfall of about R1.8bn, it said.

The forum said in a statement: "The focus is to address the most critical roads in need of repair which will cost R1.4bn, which is additional to the existing budget over the next three years."

A solution had been identified by the Road Network Management System in the form of a loan application for critical projects.

"In total 32 projects have been identified... there are 1 622km of roads which need to be addressed and 18 200 full time jobs to be created," the forum said.

"There is no hiding from the fact that... the situation in our province does look bleak."
http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/R12bn-needed-to-fix-N-West-roads-20110525

Gauteng Municipalities Under Spotlight

May 25 2011

Five Gauteng municipalities including the now-defunct Kungwini Municipality are being investigated for their role in the irregular allocation of municipal tenders and contracts worth R200-million

Gauteng Premier Nomvula Mokonyane made the disclosure in the provincial legislature during a response to questions from provincial DA leader Janet Sample, who was not in the house. 

Sample’s questions came a few days after the May 18 local government elections.
In her reply, Mokonyane singled out the two big metros, the City of Tshwane, Ekurhuleni as well as West Rand District Municipality, Kungwini and Emfuleni Local Municipality. 

The City of Tshwane, had recorded an irregular allocation of tenders worth R165.5-million - the highest such expenditure among the five. 

Kungwini Local Municipality - which has since become part of the Greater Tshwane Municipality after May 18 elections - had irregularly awarded tenders worth R25.9-million. 

The West Rand District Municipality’s tender awards were R3.1-million

Ekurhuleni Metro Council had given out R2.2-million of tenders and Emfuleni Municipality’s R21 250 was the lowest award. 

Mokonyane said Kungwini municipality’s bid evaluation committee had deviated from the initial specification requirements but had not reported on time to the provincial treasury and the Auditor-General (A-G) its reasons for doing so. 

She said the irregularity had also been disclosed in the municipality’s annual financial report.
But, Mokonyane applauded all Gauteng municipalities for adhering to laws governing the use of municipal public funds. However, she added that the municipalities had not adhered to “certain prescripts of the Municipal Finance Management Act”. 

She singled out 14 municipalities including the DA-run Midvaal Local Municipality for not adhering with these requirements. 

Among the municipalities Mokonyane mentioned were Merafong Municipality, which forms part of Carletonville and Khutsong, which had irregular expenditure of R2.5-million

Emfuleni Local Municipality’s irregular expenditure was R105 573.74, but the money had been reduced to half after SARS had agreed to a waiver on interests and penalties. 

Westonaria Local Municipality’s irregular spending was R4.4-million while the City of Tshwane’s was at R2.2-million.
 
The Ekurhuleni metro showed R1-million in irregular expenditure, while the money recorded for Mogale City Municipality was R91 000 and that for West Rand District Municipality was R3-million. 

Mokonyane said Sedibeng District Council had incurred irregular expenditure of R322 000 they had spent on hired vehicles. 

She said the problem had been compounded by the slow purchase of fleet vehicles. The policy gap and fleet problems had since been resolved. 

Mokonyane said Sedibeng had also reported overexpenditure on salaries to meet the minimum wages agreement set by the South African Local Government Association. 

She said the government’s Department of Local Government and Housing was on track to give to give support to these municipalities and improve their financial management. 

Mokonyane was unable to respond on the state of the City of Joburg because the A-G’s report has still not been finalised.

http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/gauteng-municipalities-under-spotlight-1.1073465 

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

ANC announces Gauteng mayors

2011-05-24

Johannesburg - Former Johannesburg finance boss Parks Tau is the city's new mayor.....





The man who was in charge of finance and planning during the billing crisis is now the boss of the whole municipality, and has already made clear that service delivery and effective governance are not his top priorities. 


Let the corruption begin.

Welcome aboard the gravy train 

Let's wait for the skeletons to come out. I have yet to see an ANC leader do something other than for themselves. If there are any improvements it will be to boost ANC brand loyalty and image, and not for the sake of the people.

Johannesburg - Former Johannesburg finance boss Parks Tau is the city's new mayor, the ANC in Gauteng announced on Tuesday.

Tau replaces long-serving mayor, Amos Masondo, whose two terms in office came to an end after the election.

The former city finance boss said transformation was at the top of the list of priorities for his term in office.

ANC Gauteng chairperson David Makhura also announced the names of 10 other mayors in the province. They are:

Mondli Gungubele - Ekurhuleni

Kgosientsho Ramokgopa - Tshwane

Mpho Nawa - West Rand district municipality

Simon Mofokeng - Sedibeng district municipality

Greta Hlongwane - Emfuleni local municipality

Calvin Seerane - Mogale City

Maphefo Letsie - Merafong

Sylivia Thebenare - Randfontein local municipality

Lerato Maloka - Lesedi local municipality

Nonkoliso Tundzi - Westonaria local municipality.



Parks Tau: the man behind the council's bills 

Written by Thomas Thale   
23 January 2004   

HE might look youthful - indeed, at 33 years, he is the youngest councillor on the mayoral committee - but Johannesburg city councillor Parks Tau holds what is by far the most arduous portfolio, that of finance, strategy and economic development, which includes the revenue department.

As political head of the much maligned revenue department, which has been slated by ratepayers for allegedly issuing inaccurate bills and then cutting off services, Tau has been in the firing line of customer complaints. But he remains unfazed by the challenge, being a seasoned political campaigner with almost two decades of political involvement behind his name.

Working from his offices in Jorissen Place, Tau gets to see firsthand irate ratepayers queuing on the ground floor to query their accounts, and has a clear grasp of the challenges facing his administration.

Tau, who is the deputy chairperson of the African National Congress in Joburg, has been involved in civic politics since 1995, when he chaired the Urban Development Committee of the then Southern Local Metropolitan Council (SLMC). He served as the deputy chairperson of the executive committee of the SLMC and as a member of the Transformation Lekgotla, which ushered in the City of Johannesburg as presently constituted.

In his previous position as councillor responsible for development planning, transportation and environment, Tau played a pivotal role in the formulation of the City's spatial development framework, the environmental management plan and the integrated transport plan. "We had given ourselves two years in which to formulate clear urban development policies and a management approach for the city, and we have largely achieve that," Tau says.

But, just when he thought he was done putting systems in place, and could retire to his Winchester Hills house to focus once again on his MBA studies, he was redeployed to the finance portfolio and had to acquaint himself with the demands of his new position from scratch. 

"I had told myself that after concluding the bulk of policy processes at planning and seeing the World Summit through, I would have a break," he says. But it was not to be.

Not for the first time, Tau has been forced to put his MBA studies on hold as he familiarises himself with his new portfolio. Indeed, disrupted schooling appears to be a motif that runs through Tau's life story.

His schooling was first interrupted during the 1976 Soweto student uprising, just as he was starting out on his first year at school in Sub A. The political turmoil of the late 1980s also resulted in Tau having to put his studies on ice to pursue student politics.
Indeed, politics is one of the two social currents that shaped Tau's formative years, the other being religion.
"Leadership has always been thrust on me," he says diffidently. From the 1980s, at the height of the national State of Emergency, as deputy president of the Soweto Student Congress (Sosco) and president of the Student Representative Council (SRC) at Pace Commercial College, and president of the Soweto Youth Congress (Soyco), Tau had his finger on the pulse of the political upheavals in Soweto.
But Tau's exposure to the brutality that defined resistance politics goes even further back. As a six-year old growing up in Zone 1 Meadowlands, he was exposed to the internecine violence between township residents and hostel inmates. He describes this "horrific" experience as "part of my life that's difficult to come to terms with".
From very early on, Tau came to understand politics as a deadly game of survival, as residents of his native Meadowlands, where he stayed with his grandparents, engaged in running battles with inmates of the nearby Meadowlands hostel. This was at the height of the 1976 student uprising, when hostel inmates opposed to the boycotts, engaged in fierce battles with township folk. The township came under siege as hostel dwellers launched indiscriminate attacks on township residents, Tau recalls. He remembers hiding under the bed with his young cousins while older people joined in the battle. "We could not play outside and had to barricade ourselves indoors as there could be a sudden eruption of war."
Concerned about the deteriorating conditions in Soweto schools, his parents sent Tau to study at St Joseph, a Roman Catholic boarding school in Aliwal North, Eastern Cape, where he completed his primary education. Lessons were conducted in Afrikaans, Tau says. "We used to joke that we were learning to speak English in Afrikaans." Today though, Tau confesses that he no longer does his Hail Mary's and has become somewhat of an agnostic.
At boarding school, Tau learned to be on his own. "You had to fend for yourself." But the teachings of the brothers and nuns have left a lasting impression on him. "Religion is part of who and what I am today. I'm not a practicing Christian anymore, but it has certainly been a platform of a value system that shaped my life," he admits. Although he has jettisoned Christianity, Tau still sees value in the faith. "I want my three sons to go to church. I think there are important value systems one gets from the church."
Tau's return to school in Soweto coincided with the resurgence of political formations allied to the then banned ANC, and soon he was in the forefront of student and youth politics.
Following the formation of the United Democratic Front in 1983, the Congress of South African Students (Cosas) was revitalised and Soyco came into being. Tau's return to Meadowlands as a young student activist in 1985 coincided with the banning of Cosas and the setting up of Sosco. "We organised ourselves within communities as comrades," Tau recalls. "Re ne re inyova (we were on a warpath)," he says nostalgically.
In 1983, Tau enrolled at Pace Commercial College in Jabulani, a private school attended mainly by children from affluent families "Not that I was from an affluent family. It was only through a Rhodes scholarship that I made it into the school," he says.
Tau was drawn into student politics, and set about galvanising students under the banner of Cosas. "We began mobilising in school to get students to participate in Cosas activities, but our headmaster at the time, Mr Rex Pennington, didn't think it appropriate for students to engage in political activities." Tau recalls. "He ran a referendum of the whole school, asking a question along the lines of - 'should the school allow political activity on school premises?'" Although they lost the referendum, student leaders never accepted the results. "We still question those results. They were never audited." The stage was thus set for conflict between school management and student leadership. Soon schools throughout Soweto were closed, as students took to the streets in massive protests.
Away from the school grounds, in 1986, during the second State of Emergency, Tau was once again caught up in the violence between hostel dwellers and township residents, but he is reluctant to speak about the experience, saying only: "I don't want to talk about that." Tau avers though, that: "For all of us who grew up in that area, conflicts have been an unfortunate part of our lives. We witnessed death from a tender age - the community has been scarred. There were ongoing battles until 1988."
His activism did not endear Tau to the authorities, both at school and within the police force, and soon, he was barred from school and put behind bars. Tau was first detained for 30 days under the State of Emergency in 1985. Prison experience only served to broaden Tau's political horizons, making him more militant.
When schools reopened in January 1986, he was back mobilising students, more radical than before. By then, he had had more exposure to struggle politics and had engaged with structures in the township and the leadership in prison. So when schools reopened, activists regrouped to Sosco, following the banning of Cosas. "At the time, those of us who had been activists, were conditionally readmitted to school but others were excluded. Our first campaign was thus to fight for those students who had been excluded to be readmitted to school."
The next year was going to be characterised by running battles between youth activists and the police, detentions and constant disruption of schooling, resulting in students not sitting for exams at the end of the year. Tau was hounded out of school, as police continuously raided the school in search of activists. "I stopped attending formal classes in standard 9. It was apparent that we couldn't sit for exams, what with police looking for us," he says. Sometime in mid-1986, Tau was once again behind bars as police clamped down on activists.

It was only in 1987 that Tau resumed studies at Harambee, a fly-by-night school in the city centre. But the struggle remained his priority as he continued mobilising students in political campaigns. "I ended up studying on my own, and managed to complete matric after two years."
But Tau's reading was not of a purely academic nature. "I read a lot of politics, economics - general reading, on my own. The culture of reading within the ANC helped me," he says. Tau remains a prolific reader.

Tau displays acute awareness of the problems besetting the revenue department. He admits that the department faces serious challenges. "We have been reviewing issues seriously. Just last week, we spent two days assessing the situation. We are determined to resolve these problems. My sense is that the challenge is to speed up the resolution of problems. The contamination of data has been identified as a major problem, but much work has been done in our data clean up programme."

There are instances of incorrect billing that creep into the system that also need to be eliminated, Tau says.

Cleaning up the data, says Tau, is not just about clearing people's bills. "We have picked up cases where clients haven't been correctly billed. In some cases, we found that people had been undercharged."

According to Tau, the revenue department has had some success in eliminating clearance certificate fraud. "Even before I came here, there was significant progress on certain fronts. We will continue to step up credit control." Explaining the rationale behind cutting off services, Tau says: "We are trying to limit instances where people accumulate huge debts before the council intervenes". The department has also set out to beef up its staff complement by recruiting experienced personnel.

Tau says he would like to see his department being able to identify problems and resolve them without subjecting ratepayers to any inconvenience. "We will strive to give correct meter readings and improve on the consistency of meter readings. When we receive complaints of incorrect billing or meter reading, we must resolve them within a specified period." Tau promises not to rest until the problems at revenue are brought under control.

Tau has his job cut out for him, but, if his track record is anything to go by, he might just be the man to take it all in his stride.



Saturday, May 21, 2011

Nelson Mandels Bay Tourist Attraction to Close



NELSON Mandela Bay’s tourism industry suffered has yet another crushing blow with the sudden closure of the popular McArthur Baths swimming pool complex.




The metro has also shut down its once internationally renowned Oceanarium at Bayworld, where other facilities have languished at the run-down complex for many months.















Adding to the city’s bleak tourism picture is the demise of the famous Apple Express narrow gauge steam train at the end of last year 






















and the loss of the last of the city’s once-prized Blue Flag beaches at the beginning of this year.

The Blue Flag initiative was born in France in 1985, with the first coastal municipalities awarded the Blue Flag on the basis of sewage treatment and bathing water quality.
The concept has since grown to include other criteria, and there are now over 3 450 Blue Flag beaches and marinas in 41 countries around the world.
Blue Flag is managed in South Africa by the Wildlife and Environment Society of South Africa, in partnership with the Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism and participating coastal authorities under the department's Coast Care programme.

An historic, art deco-styled complex that underwent a highly-publicised R13.5-illion revamp about 10 years ago, McArthur Baths closed following a surprise decision by Bel-Essex, which had operated the complex on behalf of the municipality for the past 10 years, not to renew their lease. The company has already removed its equipment from the complex.

Bel-Essex has remained tight-lipped about the reason for its decision, with managing director Riaan van der Mescht saying its contract to manage the baths had expired at the end of March.

Not so, said municipal spokesperson Kupido Baron, who claimed the management contract would only expire in October.

“This is a sticky matter,” Baron said. “Our legal services are busy looking into this.

“Bel-Essex terminated the contract which was meant to expire only in October. We acted in good faith and bent over backwards for the operators. “We also gave them ample opportunity to rectify the situation, but they have acted in a malicious manner,” Baron said.

The closure of the baths comes just days before 1800 athletes from 36 nations arrive in Port Elizabeth for the high-profile annual Ironman event on Sunday, April 10. An  offshoot “IronKids” event is meant to be  held from McArthur Baths.

In a letter to the metro’s Recreation and Culture Portfolio councillor Maria Hermans, DA councillor Dean Biddulph expressed concern about the situation.

Biddulph said he had contacted representatives from Bel-Essex to appeal to them to consider maintaining the baths at least until after the Ironman weekend, but they had not been prepared to do so.

Biddulph said as a result responsibility for the facility reverted to the metro as from April 1. He said he had spoken to Beaches and Resorts Director Tony Knott, who had suggested he contact Leon Botha, head of pools, “to see if he might assist in maintaining the facility”.

“He says the facility falls under Facilities Management, that he has no budget allocation for the pools and therefore is not in position to assist,” Biddulph said.

“The metro cannot afford to be embarrassed by pools that are in a poor condition over the Ironman weekend. Our beachfront has taken a beating in recent times as a result of the ongoing Bayworld saga and the loss of Blue Flag status.”

Biddulph appealed for “an intervention at the highest level” to ensure the facility was kept at an acceptable standard. He also said it was “vitally important that ongoing maintenance be done to protect the substantial private sector investment” made by a tenant at the complex – popular restaurant bar Cubana.

“I would urge that immediate consideration be given to fast-tracking the process (of) calling for expressions of interest to ensure the continued viability of the complex. A new operator urgently needs to be identified and contracts put in place.”

Eastern Cape tourism specialist Peter Myles said the most important aspect now was for the complex to be maintained. “It could very quickly deteriorate and become an eyesore,” said Myles.

He added the complex had always been an attractive and prominent feature along the Port Elizabeth beachfront. “In order to attract not only tourists, but also investors, we have to keep up a world-class look.”

Baron has assured that services at the baths would soon resume “as normal”.
“Our beach office will be taking over the management of the facility until this situation is rectified. All the planned events, such as the IronKids, will go ahead.”

PE Rugby Stadium Stripped



Bay United general manager Lungsi Mooi sits among the weeds at the EPRU Stadium

THE Eastern Province Rugby Union Stadium, once the proud home of top class rugby in Port Elizabeth, is being systematically stripped by looters while historic memorabilia in the stadium’s offices and once plush hospitality suites have been vandalised and trampled on.
Now staff still left working in the stadium say they fear for their safety.




Boet Erasmus Stadium
Country City Stadium Name Capacity Seats Standing Seats
South Africa Port Elizabeth Boet Erasmus Stadium 33852 33852 0
Some best attendances Boet Erasmus Stadium
Order Team 1 Team 2 Score Attendance Year Competition Sport
1 SOUTH AFRICA CANADA 20-0 31000 1995 World cup Rugby Group A Rugby
2 CANADA ROMANIA 34-3 18000 1995 World cup Rugby Group A Rugby
3 AUSTRALIA CANADA 27-11 15000 1995 World cup Rugby Group A Rugby

When Weekend Post visited the dilapidated stadium, efforts to enter the once grand Lawton Fourie Room proved difficult because of a cascade of water falling from the ceiling.

The guardhouse building at the main gate was unmanned and access to the stadium and the lifts in the main pavilion was unrestricted.

 Many of the abandoned suites were littered with broken glass, smashed windows and hanging electrical fittings which had been ripped out of the wall.

One room, which appeared once to have been used by the EPRU, had been ransacked and the drawers of a filing cabinet containing disciplinary case hearings rifled through and files strewn on the floor. The sliding door leading out from the suite had also been shattered.

 Photographs of proud moments in the history of EP Rugby lie discarded on the floor amid shattered glass panes. One suite, with a nameplate on the door: “Alan Solomons EP head coach”, has been abandoned and ransacked.

Though rugby is no longer played at the stadium, the run-down venue is now the logistical and training headquarters of Bay United which has administrative offices in the main grandstand. This week United general manager Lungsi Mooi spoke of her fear of going to work because of brazen looters entering the premises and stripping anything valuable out of the once luxurious wood-panelled suites.

Mooi, who has her office on the third floor of the main pavilion, is concerned for her safety because of the aggressive looting and lack of security at the stadium, which is municipal property. “I do not like spending time here any more. I have phoned the municipality to tell them about the looting on numerous occasions, but nothing is done.”

Sitting among the towering weeds on one of the stadium’s stands, Mooi appealed to the municipality to step up security and stop the looters from stripping the stadium’s remaining assets. “This place has become dilapidated and it is sad to see. Something drastic needs to be done.


 “There is talk that the stadium will eventually be demolished and new buildings erected. But I have heard nothing officially,” Mooi said.

Though Bay United play their matches at Gelvandale, the stadium once known as the Boet Erasmus is their logistical headquarters and they train on the main field.

The United players do not use the changerooms as they are in a poor state of repair.

 “We were just put here temporarily, so we cannot take charge of things like security and looting. Someone at local government or the municipality needs to take charge,” Mooi said.

 She said she would not like the stadium to be demolished as it could still serve a purpose as a sporting facility.

 “There is a need for facilities like this and I still see a future for the stadium. We could play our lesser games here while the big matches could be played at the new Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium,” Mooi said.

 Municipal spokesperson Kupido Baron said the looting was not acceptable and that the situation would be examined.

 “Even though there are plans to demolish the stadium we will have to look at an interim measure to stop the looting. Bay United have been placed at the stadium on a temporary basis. More permanent arrangements will have to be made for them,” Baron said.

In its heyday the Boet Erasmus was one of South Africa’s top four rugby stadiums and regularly attracted crowds of more than 50000 for tests against the All Blacks and British Lions.

 One of the most famous games at the stadium was in 1974 when the Boks lost to the Lions in what became known as the “Battle of the Boet”.


Saturday, May 14, 2011

Corrupt IT tender

May 14 2011 

Millions blown

Police are about to swoop on the Ekurhuleni municipality - perhaps even before Wednesday’s election - and arrest five senior officials for an elaborate tender fraud that has cost hundreds of millions of rands for a computer system that does not work. 

The Saturday Star can reveal that a special investigating team has finalised its probe and will meet with the National Prosecuting Authority next week to have the arrest warrants issued. 

Specialist forensic investigators Aurco were called in to the East Rand metropolis when the scope of the fraud proved to be too big for the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality’s (EMM) internal auditors. 

The auditors themselves were tipped off by anonymous whistleblowers. 

The investigation discovered massive fraud and mismanagement in the EMM Information and Communication Technology (ICT) department involving suppliers in collusion with the municipality’s own staff. 

The fraud began when Ekurhuleni looked for a company to design and implement a new computer network infrastructure for the municipality. 

An internal audit report rang alarm bells when it found the winner of the tender had bypassed the municipality’s supply chain management policy. 

International computer giant IBM bid unsuccessfully for the tender. It could have done the work for a third less than the original quote in a third less time. IBM quoted R35 million to have the project completed in 42 weeks, while TCM - the company that “won” the tender - quoted R90m to finish the job in 156 weeks. 

The internal auditors found that TCM had never complied with the bid requirements and that their bid application documents should have been rejected. IBM has gold partner status, which means it has the broadest range of expertise, while TCM had but a third rating and was not as competent as IBM. This rating was only awarded to TCM after the tender was awarded. 

The audit also found that EMM’s staff allowed TCM to start the project without having insurance risk cover, should they fail to complete the project. Over and above this, TCM won the tender without a project or a design plan. 

Ekurhuleni paid TCM a maintenance contract before the system and products were installed and implemented. 

Eight months after the tender was awarded to TCM, someone in the municipality asked about the company’s project plan only to be told none existed. The project manager said a meeting would be held to draw one up and would be e-mailed to EMM’s internal audit department. From June 2007 until June 2009, EMM paid TCM nearly R279m without the project being completed

The audit report also found that EMM had awarded a tender for the supply, delivery installation, implementation of computers and its components to a company called Meropa. 

But Meropa was only registered as a company less than a year before the contract was awarded and it has only one member. That person is related to an EMM employee. 

Meropa in turn is inexplicably linked to four other companies that have been awarded tenders to render a service as part of the municipality’s ICT system. In total, Aurco has found that Ekurhuleni paid at least R386m on its ICT needs to these six linked companies that might well have been set up as shell companies or “post box” vendors, to channel council funds. 

Each company by-passed tender procedures and Aurco believes that there was “bid-rigging” too, where the shell companies were able to tender for work with inside knowledge of what reputable companies had already bid. 

- Last week, the Saturday Star reported how the EMM’s 2010 office, set up to implement world cup initiatives, wasted R22m between popular DJ S’bu and the greening of non-existent sports fields. 

In the process, they flouted tender regulations, according to a secret forensic report.
The council requested a probe into the validity of its 2010 office’s spending and appointed Indyebo Consulting to probe the fields and DJ S’bu’s record company. Indyebo recommended that the Special Investigations Unit get involved. 

http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/millions-blown-in-corrupt-it-tender-1.1068855