The Herald (South Africa)

Over to you, Mr Mettler

Acting city boss gets job after selection hiccup

- Rochelle de Kock and Avuyile Mngxitama-Diko dekockr@timesmedia.co.za

AFTER forking out more than R500 000 to recruit a new city boss, the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipali­ty has decided to stick with the man who has been at the helm for the past year – Johann Mettler. His appointmen­t was approved by the council yesterday.

The municipali­ty, which decided just a month ago to hire Vuyo Mlokothi, backtracke­d on the appointmen­t because he allegedly failed to disclose crucial informatio­n relating to his previous job.

Mayor Athol Trollip said this had created a breakdown in the trust relationsh­ip before Mlokothi even set foot inside City Hall.

He said Mlokothi had been given five opportunit­ies to come clean about his alleged suspension by the State Informatio­n Technology Agency (Sita).

An upset Mlokothi lashed out at the “unprofessi­onal” way the recruitmen­t was handled, saying he had heard of his appointmen­t – and the decision not to hire him – from the media.

“I am also getting these latest developmen­ts from the media,” he said.

“If [it] is true . . . this recruitmen­t process – particular­ly around my name – has been handled very unprofessi­onally by the powers that be and [has been] clumsy to say the least.

“I will await a formal communicat­ion from the council ... before making any substantiv­e comment, which could possibly also clear some misinforma­tion either on the side of the council or the media.”

Mettler, 51, a law master’s graduate from the University of the Western Cape and Sweden’s Lund University with a wealth of experience in local government, said he had accepted the job.

“I’m really happy [it has] turned out the way it has,” he said.

“I would like to continue with the work that I started here.

“I look forward to adding value to Nelson Mandela Bay. It’s something I’m very serious about.”

After yesterday’s special council sitting, Trollip and his deputy, Mongameli Bobani, also announced that chief financial officer Trevor Harper had been placed on precaution­ary suspension pending the outcome of an investigat­ion into dodgy payments he allegedly authorised.

The decision follows two disciplina­ry tribunals, which looked at whether any laws were broken when millions of rands were paid to companies that either did not have a lawful contract in place, or were not appointed through proper supply chain processes.

The companies – Afrisec and Erastyle – were paid for work related to the troubled bus system.

Trollip said Harper was innocent until proven guilty, and should he be cleared of any wrongdoing he would return to his job.

“Mr Harper must be placed on precaution­ary suspension so that investigat­ions can happen without any interrupti­ons or interferen­ce, and so that the informatio­n required in that investigat­ion is not tampered with in any way,” he said.

Harper could not be reached for comment.

It emerged yesterday that Trollip had received a tip-off on October 26 – the day before the council approved Mlokothi’s appointmen­t – that he might have been suspended at Sita.

Trollip said he had asked Mlokothi repeatedly about the reasons for his premature departure from Sita in

July and he had been assured that the departure was amicable.

“On the strength of that and his score, I had no reason to doubt Mr Mlokothi and I went to council to ask to endorse his appointmen­t on the 27th,” he said.

When he eventually managed to get all the details of the alleged suspension, he found there had been serious non-disclosure.

Asked why recruitmen­t firm Oceana HR Profession­als – which came with a price tag of R534 090 – had not picked up on Mlokothi’s job history, Trollip said it did competency tests and background checks.

“One thing . . . about discovery is that if somebody hides something deep enough, you only discover it when you discover it,” he said.

“We paid Oceana to find candidates, which they did and we shortliste­d.”

The ANC complained they had not been given informatio­n pertaining to the recruitmen­t process prior to the council meeting.

ANC chief whip Litho Suka said they had nothing against Mettler, but were opposed to the process, which they believed could be challenged legally.

Suka said Mettler had scored fourth in the interviews and they wanted to know why the second and third candidates were not considered.

“Surely there would be financial implicatio­ns if they are challenged,” he said.

“Even Vuyo Mlokothi will challenge the municipali­ty if he uses his common sense. “It shows the DA coalition is in a shambles.” Trollip said a legal opinion said the decision to appoint Mettler was protected by the law.

Although Mettler had not scored the secondhigh­est during the interview, his experience of managing a metropolit­an municipali­ty was an advantage over the two runner-up candidates.

Trollip said he had apologised to him for being put through such a difficult time and experience.

“I said I take full responsibi­lity, but I had to be 100% sure that the person we were going to appoint as city manager was someone I could have full trust in,” he said. – Additional reporting by Yoliswa Sobuwa

 ?? Picture: EUGENE COETZEE ?? VERY HAPPY: Johann Mettler is looking forward to continuing with his work for the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipali­ty
Picture: EUGENE COETZEE VERY HAPPY: Johann Mettler is looking forward to continuing with his work for the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipali­ty

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