Grocott's Mail

Makana, Notyawa consider options

- By SUE MACLENNAN

Mayor Nomhle Gaga yesterday in a special council meeting expressed relief at a ruling that may allow Makana Municipali­ty to proceed with the process of appointing a full-time municipal manager. However, Paul Notyawa, who has pursued his two-year battle for the post has another seven days to appeal the judgment handed down in the High Court in Grahamstow­n last week.

Judge Judith Roberson last Thursday dismissed with costs Notyawa’s applicatio­n to have Makana and the Co-operative Governance MEC declare him to have been lawfully appointed as municipal manager in March 2015, and provide him with an employment contract.

Notyawa had also held that the decision to readvertis­e the post on the basis he didn’t meet the minimum competency requiremen­ts should be set aside.

Makana Municipali­ty was in April 2017 interdicte­d from proceeding with the process of appointing a new MM, pending the outcome of this case.

The basis of the case was the decision by Cogta MEC Fikile Xasa not to approve Notyawa’s appointmen­t. Because of instructio­ns given to Notyawa by local, regional and national ANC leadership during the subsequent period, he held that Xasa’s decision, and the ANC-controlled Makana Council’s recognitio­n of it, constitute­d political interferen­ce in what should have been an administra­tive decision.

In her judgment Roberson conceded that while it was clear that the MEC was against Notyawa’s appointmen­t for party political reasons, the decision was in fact supported by the Municipal Systems Act (Section 54A) which stipulates specific qualificat­ions.

While Notyawa had qualificat­ions and experience, these were not the qualificat­ions stipulated as a requiremen­t for the post.

Roberson cited Notyawa’s delay in bringing the applicatio­n as a further reason for her judgment. Notyawa withdrew his first applicatio­n in February 2016 and launched the most recent one in February 2017.

“During all this time that the applicant delayed, the Municipali­ty was obliged to appoint an acting Municipal Manager, resulting in the inability to achieve the desired level of stability and consistenc­y in the management of the Municipali­ty,” Roberson said.

She also said the terms under which the applicatio­n had been brought were incorrect. While it was brought as a legality review, it should in fact have been in terms of the Promotions of Administra­tive Justice Act (PAJA).

Also referred to in the judgment was the fact that should Notyawa be appointed in the post of municipal manager, he could only hold it until the end of this month. This is because of legislatio­n that rules any appointmen­t by a sitting council remains in force only one year after a new council is voted in. Local government elections in August 2016 saw the election of a new council.

Notyawa this week did not confirm whether he would appeal the judgment

“My lawyers are studying the judgment and will come to a decision,” he told Grocott’s Mail yesterday.

Acting municipal manager Dali Mlenzana said the appointmen­t of a permanent MM as soon as possible was an extremely high priority for the municipali­ty.

He said while they waited for the 14 days allowed for Notyawa to appeal to lapse, they were investigat­ing their options.

The issue had been discussed in a confidenti­al session of yesterday’s Special Council meeting.

“We need to compile a report on the matter to find closure,” Mlenzana said yesterday. “Based on regulation­s regarding the appointmen­t of senior managers, the time period has lapsed. However, we are investigat­ing whether this might be condoned on the basis of the delay the interdict caused.”

Failing a special ruling to allow the process to continue, and unless Notyawa appealed the ruling, the post would be readvertis­ed.

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