Residents desperate for ‘permanent solution’
RESIDENTS and businesses in Kimberley have indicated that although it is an inconvenience and safety risk, they have made the necessary preparations for the planned water shutdown that started last night and will last until Monday.
Colville and Floors residents who do not own Jojo tanks at their homes, said that their wish is for Sol Plaatje Municipality to fix the city’s water supply infrastructure permanently.
The municipality informed residents that a planned water shutdown will be in effect until Monday in order to conduct repair work on four major leaks on the bulk water pipeline.
A resident from Colville, who lives in a two-room shanty with 11 family members, said they have no space to store their buckets of water.
“I am staying inside the shank with my husband and our three minor children. My deceased sister's children are also living with us. I took my sister’s children after she died and they had nowhere else to go. My youngest sister and her husband and their two children are also living with us. We are cramped inside the shack and it has already been a challenge to fit all of us into this shack. When I heard of the water shutdown, I felt deflated because I knew we would once again have to fill up our buckets in order to have water to drink and wash,” she said.
She added that the buckets of water are a safety hazard to the younger children inside the shanty.
A local early childhood centre in Floors said the water shutdown makes looking after young children very challenging.
“We have decided that we will be open on Friday, but we are not certain about whether we will be open on Monday. We know the water usually returns late and we cannot take the risk of having the children among these buckets,” the ECD practitioner said.
Many residents and businesses have indicated that the water shutdown has placed a burden on them.
“What is frustrating about these water shutdowns is that there is no indication on whether there is real progress being made to address the matter permanently. We are always told that there are leaks and maintenance work needs to be conducted. However, it appears as if the maintenance work is a temporary solution.
“We have to go for days with no water and then there is still no solution to this problem. This problem has been dragging on for many years and every year the number of water shutdowns just keep increasing. When will there be a permanent solution?”
Northern Cape Department of Education spokesperson Geoffrey van der Merwe said school principals will make a decision on whether schools will remain open or if they will be closed during the shutdown.
The provincial chairperson of the National Federated Chamber Of Commerce and Industry (Nafcoc), Abraham Malo, said the municipality has had constant communication with the chamber regarding the water shutdown.
“We have been in communication with the municipality as well as local businesses with regards to the planned shutdown. We have asked our members to make the necessary preparations for the shutdown,” said Malo.
The chief executive officer (CEO) of the Northern Cape Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Nocci), Sharon Steyn, commended the municipality for issuing a statement on the shutdown well in advance.
“We do not want a water shutdown, but this shutdown is needed in order to address the problems we are facing with the pipeline. This time around, the municipality has been constantly informing resident and business owners about the shutdown. They have spread the message on various social media platforms and other communication platforms. As Nocci, we have also informed our members.the word on the shutdown was spread in advance,” said Steyn.
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