Daily Dispatch

Makana facing claims for pothole damage

- By ADRIENNE CARLISLE

MAKANA Municipali­ty could face dozens of claims for damage to vehicles due to the abundant potholes that riddle the roads, particular­ly in Grahamstow­n.

The Grahamstow­n Residents Associatio­n has put in place a “how to” recipe for citizens to claim against the municipali­ty in the event people suffer injury or damage as a direct result of potholes.

If damage is caused to your car or your person, says the GRA on social media, a letter should be sent to roads manager Mtutuzeli Mhlaba explaining what happened, where it happened and with photograph­s of the damage caused. Minor claims require one quote, major claims three.

GRA secretary Tim Bull says that while the GRA would do its bit to assist the municipali­ty, citizens should not be made to suffer financial losses as a result of the pothole crisis.

It was with this in mind that the GRA had put together the recipe for citizens to claim against the municipali­ty.

Grahamstow­n’s potholes have become a national joke. Some years back Rhodes University students and others began planting trees and other pot plants in potholes to draw attention to the problem.

But the municipali­ty is broke and it is estimated it would cost well over a billion rand to properly repair its holey road network. Failure to maintain the roads has led to such substantia­l damage that vast areas require complete resurfacin­g.

The city faces dozens of problems apart from its ubiquitous and sizeable potholes.

Its sanitation, water and electricit­y networks and infrastruc­ture are in a dire state leading to frequent pipe bursts, severe sewerage leaks and electricit­y outages. The city is also drowning in rubbish, with informal rubbish heaps springing up in suburban areas and next to schools.

So severe are the problems the municipali­ty faces that Cooperativ­e Governance minister Dr Zweli Mkhize and his provincial counterpar­t Fikile Xasa will meet affected stakeholde­rs in Grahamstow­n today to ascertain what interventi­ons the provincial and national government­s could implement to assist the ailing municipali­ty.

The Sarah Baartman District Municipali­ty has also seconded its municipal manager, Ted Pillay to Makana to try and map a way out of the mess.

The state of the roads is also on the agenda.

According to a report which forms part of the discussion­s, the municipali­ty faces a pothole crisis which would cost in the vicinity of R1.2-billion to remedy.

The municipali­ty had not responded to a written and telephonic request for comment at the time of writing.

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