The Citizen (Gauteng)

Bell tolls for toxic Jozi trolls

- Martin Williams DA city councillor in Johannesbu­rg

Despite the bad publicity around billing, surveys show that residents approve of the changes in Johannesbu­rg in the first year of the DA-led administra­tion.

Before the age of social media, trolls were ugly creatures who lived under bridges, from whence they pounced on unsuspecti­ng victims. Ugliness remains a defining characteri­stic of the modern version – internet trolls. The verb “to troll” is traditiona­lly used by fishermen. It means to trail a lure from a moving vessel: trolling to evoke reaction from prey. And catch them.

Today, internet trolls toss out barbs while trawling through social media, provoking responses.

Social media are part of a Johannesbu­rg ward councillor’s routine. Although many of us belong to multiple neighbourh­ood Facebook groups, and we use Twitter, much more communicat­ion is via WhatsApp, e-mail and electronic newsletter­s.

Bearing in mind the potential for negative comment, I am grateful for the relative absence of trolls (fingers crossed). Take, for example, Joburg’s notorious billing crisis, which the DAled administra­tion inherited.

Billing is in the headlines, and was on Carte Blanche twice recently. Thousands attended a recent “Billing Day” at Marks Park. As ward councillor­s, we receive endless complaints about incorrect bills, pre-terminatio­n notices and service cut-offs.

The equanimity displayed by affected residents is amazing. To have your water and/or electricit­y cut-off is damn inconvenie­nt. Given the number of pre-terms and disconnect­ions, I am surprised more residents aren’t angrier.

Inevitably, some vent their frustratio­ns against councillor­s. However, most are for- bearing. They understand what is going on. The long-festering troubles around billing were not properly addressed in the past. All sorts of dynamics come into play.

Political and criminal sabotage are significan­t factors, unleashed by mayor Herman Mashaba’s campaign against corruption. Most staff are honest and hardworkin­g. Eventually the rot will be excised. Right now the malcontent­s still have capacity to cause chaos at every stage of the billing process, including meter reading, data capturing, and so on.

Despite the bad publicity around billing, surveys show that residents approve of the changes in Johannesbu­rg in the first year of the DA-led administra­tion.

For example, in the biennial customer satisfacti­on survey, conducted in April, the city’s overall performanc­e rating increased from 59% in 2015 to 61% in 2017. Even more impressive was a jump from 39% in July 2016, to 53% in July 2017, recorded in the Ipsos Government Performanc­e Barometer. In last week’s Ward 124 by-election, the ANC’s majority was reduced.

Fixing local government is not like making instant coffee. Remember, too, that Johannesbu­rg is much bigger than any other SA municipali­ty. Its R56-billion annual budget dwarfs those of many African countries.

When comparing Johannesbu­rg to Cape Town (budget R37 billion), bear in mind the time frame. It took at least three years to unravel Cape Town’s inherited mess and show substantia­l improvemen­ts.

From that perspectiv­e, Johannesbu­rg’s oneyear-old administra­tion is doing well. The bell tolls for pessimisti­c trolls.

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