Talk of the Town

Infrastruc­ture projects under way in Port Alfred

-

Talk of The Town’s Faith Qinga followed up with Ndlambe Municipali­ty on infrastruc­ture upgrade projects in Port Alfred, and below are the responses she received from spokespers­on Cecil Mbolekwa.

Q: When we reported on the Thornhill water tower in April, the contractor­s told Ndlambe the already delayed project would be completed within three months. Did they meet the deadline and what is the current status of the elevated tower?

A: No, the deadline was not met due to the fact that Mamlambo Constructi­on had undergone a change in directorsh­ip. This change resulted in cash flow problems. However, this will not affect the project because the municipali­ty is still committed to completing it.

At the rate of progress in April, it was expected the project would be complete by July; however in May the project team was informed Mamlambo Constructi­on had gone into voluntary liquidatio­n, resulting in work being stopped. Their staff were not paid for May.

During May and June , the funder (office of the premier) and Ndlambe Local Municipali­ty, together with the profession­al team, commenced with arrangemen­ts to complete the project utilising remaining funds and equipment on site.

The project is about 80% complete and it is anticipate­d work will recommence in September.

Q: Please tell us about the new

project involving pipes being laid next to the road at Station Hill. What infrastruc­ture is being installed and what area will it serve?

A: This is part of the long-term plan the municipali­ty is embarking on due to sewage spillages and pump stations that are not functional in Port Alfred.

The aim is to eliminate all these pump stations that frequently fail by gravitatin­g sewage down to the new proposed pump station. This will be positioned next to the Nuwater RO plant.

Thereafter, the aim is to pump this sewage straight to the

Port Alfred Waste Water Treatment Works (WWTW). The Municipal plan is holistic: it is to augment sewage flowing into the WWTW, thus unlocking the reclamatio­n plant which is operated by Quality Filtration Systems. At present the reclamatio­n plant is not functional due to low sewage volumes entering it.

Q: In the council meeting that sat on May 31, the council approved a budget of R85m under the water services infrastruc­ture grant. Some of these funds were to be invested in sewerage upgrades. Please could you update us on the

status of these upgrades.

A: Yes, it is correct. All these funds are being invested in sewerage upgrades as per my discussion. There are five projects planned to be implemente­d by the municipali­ty under the R85m budget. Two of those closed for tendering on August 23 and the bids are currently being evaluated by the bid evaluation committee. The Wharf Street project is another of these. It is already in the implementa­tion stage and is progressin­g well.

The last two projects are still under design and are expected to be out to tender before the end of September.

 ?? Picture: FAITH QINGA ?? SEWERAGE UPGRADES: Infrastruc­ture works are currently under way on Wharf Street as part of the municipali­ty’s long-term plan to end sewage spillages in Port Alfred. In this particular project, several fault-prone pump stations will be replaced with a gravity-fed system to a single pump station.
Picture: FAITH QINGA SEWERAGE UPGRADES: Infrastruc­ture works are currently under way on Wharf Street as part of the municipali­ty’s long-term plan to end sewage spillages in Port Alfred. In this particular project, several fault-prone pump stations will be replaced with a gravity-fed system to a single pump station.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa