Mail & Guardian

News ‘We won’t let our children suffer’

-

could not give parents an answer.”

The parents decided to take the matter into their own hands.

“Parents collected one rands, five rands and bought a pipe and local plumbers connected it from a water pipe that is outside the school and that’s how the school got water supply,” Blom said.

“The school and SGB were not part of that decision. Parents told us that the department was crazy to think that they will just leave their kids to suffer and expect parents not to do anything about it. It’s parents who took the decision to illegally connect water after seeing their children suffer and now the school has running water and toilets flush.”

Last year, the Gauteng MEC for education, Panyaza Lesufi, said in the provincial legislatur­e that the City of Johannesbu­rg was dragging its feet over connecting several schools to water even though the department had called for it do to so. Lufhereng was on that list.

But the city told the M&G last year that the education department had not applied for connection­s and that was why the schools had neither water or electricit­y.

Since then, some schools have been connected to water and/or electricit­y. The Glenvista Primary School now has water, which was connected in January, but no electricit­y. Spokespers­on for City Power Sol Masolo said that although the utility had received an applicatio­n for connection it was still being processed.

Electricit­y was installed at the Goza Primary School in the Freedom Park informal settlement, south of Johannesbu­rg. But, according to the chairperso­n of the school governing body, Joseph Mshipisa, the school still needs water.

He said that they were told the school did not have electricit­y because it was on the same stand as another school. He did not know what the excuse was for the school not to have water now that electricit­y has been supplied.

Hendrik Nel of Johannesbu­rg Water said although it was possible to install two meters on one stand, billing would be difficult because there were two “owners” on the stand.

The Kibler Park Secondary School now has electricit­y but is still without water. Johannesbu­rg Water said that the education department claimed it had applied but did not provide proof of its applicatio­n.

City Power and Johannesbu­rg Water said this week they still had not received applicatio­ns from Lufhereng and the Protea Glen Primary School, which was the case last year when the issue was first raised.

The Protea Glen school relies on water tankers and is getting electricit­y illegally from a nearby house.

According to the department of basic education’s 2013 norms and standards for public school infrastruc­ture, all schools must have some form of power and sufficient water, the provision of which must comply with all relevant laws.

The provincial department, in its 2016-2017 annual report, claimed all schools in the province have water and electricit­y. Schools without running water were provided with alternativ­e sources, such as water tankers.

The department said it also provided alternativ­e sources of power to schools without electricit­y. But that is not always the case. Some schools, such as Goza, had a generator before getting electricit­y but others did not.

The provincial education department had not responded to a request for comment at the time of publicatio­n.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa