Talk of the Town

RESIDENTS SPEAK OUT ON PRESSING INFRASTRUC­TURAL NEEDS

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THIS week’s question on Talk of the Town’s Facebook page was: What do you think our most pressing infrastruc­tural needs are in Ndlambe, and do you think the municipali­ty is addressing these needs?

The general consensus seems to be that roads and water are our most pressing needs. Readers felt the municipali­ty was not addressing these needs and money was not being used properly, or debts were not being collected from ratepayers, which would allow the municipali­ty to do much more.

Marcia Williams said: “The roads need serious attention!” She doesn’t think the problem is being sufficient­ly addressed by the municipali­ty.

Sonja Koekemoer felt the biggest issue was the water. “We don’t have tap water that’s drinkable!” Williams concurred “it smells awful”!

Dawn Butler said the municipali­ty is trying, but the backlog is so bad it would take years. Writing from Station Hill, Janine Backward

Wagner said the roads are bad. However, Roy Smith said the sewage problem is in his opinion the most pressing. “Roads and man-made structures are important, but our eco-system is irreplacea­ble.”

Similarly, Louisa Samuel said: “Definitely the sewerage system. Sad to have it flowing into the Kowie River.”

Dawn Hains said the water situation was the most important. She said the municipali­ty seemed to be addressing the situation, but were only moving from one crisis to another.

Beverly Young said: “This is no longer a one-horse village. Port Alfred is a blossoming mini-city now. That the aged water-pipes, sewage and electricit­y is almost third world, is a factor that has to be addressed. I seldom complain, yet find myself wondering exactly where my property rates money is going. Surely to refurbish the infrastruc­ture?”

Andrew Lamei wrote that the most pressing need would be “to fire the non-performing staff first and get qualified skilled staff”.

Helen Cowie was one of the many who mentioned roads and Linda Reynolds and Helen Lloyd Purdon agreed that roads and water were most pressing.

Gavin Came wrote: “The most pressing problem is that half of us don’t pay our rates . . . so, infrastruc­ture to do debt collection is most pressing. All else rises or falls on this, can you imagine what could be done with the other R104-million?”

Linda Edwards said the water supply and the roads in Bathurst are urgent. “But it appears that our municipali­ty are completely incompeten­t, and anyone they hire is too.”

Williams agreed: “Bathurst seems to be left out. They laid water pipes, messing up the already messed-up roads. Now you have to apply and pay to connect that water supply to your house? You already pay rates.

“Bathurst isn’t cheaper than Port Alfred. Even if you are self-sufficient and don’t make use of the municipali­ty’s shocking service, you still have to pay for it!” Lynette Faith Bignell said nothing seemed to have changed. “Got worse probably! But, that seems to be the lie of the whole land!”

However, Pauline Strömbeck wrote: “I do see quite a bit of work being done the last couple of months. Maybe it isn’t good enough, but if they do keep this up we might have better roads in the next year all round. I wish they would work on Alfred Road too.”

Came commented again, saying: “There is massive work being done, with very limited financial resources. Barely enough money to pay salaries.”

Adriana Sandys-Thomas Holthuysen said: “Shocking and the big boys rape the funds.”

Bessie Jordaan asked for the rubbish skip to be returned to the tourism office parking lot and Zyrin

Daniels said potholes were the biggest problem.

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