The Herald (South Africa)

Hard times ahead if saving of water not stepped up – Trollip

- Siyamtanda Capa and Deneesha Pillay capas@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

NELSON Mandela Bay is headed for disaster if efforts to save water are not stepped up, with the dam levels reaching a combined average of 24% this week.

Residents could be saddled with further restrictio­ns if the situation continues unabated.

Mayor Athol Trollip warned yesterday that while the Nooitgedac­ht Low Level Water Scheme provided additional water, not all supply sources could be supplement­ed from the same water system.

“With only 10.37% of recorded water supply, Kouga Dam is the most affected, while Churchill Dam languishes at 18.08%,” Trollip said.

“The other dams, Groendal and Impofu, have a recorded supply of 48.37% and 36.81%.”

Trollip said this was a clear sign of hard times ahead.

“With no prediction of meaningful rains soon, the new water levels call for a renewed sense of commitment from all metro residents, businesses and other relevant stakeholde­rs.

“While we acknowledg­e the impact the municipali­ty’s water saving awareness campaigns have had since their initial rollout, the metro continues to experience high water consumptio­n from both domestic users and businesses.

“We wish to make a clarion call on residents to assist in preventing a drought disaster by monitoring their household consumptio­n and further tightening their water conservati­on efforts.

“We also appreciate the continued vigilance from residents who are consistent­ly reporting water leaks.

“Through their efforts, we have been able to repair 5 938 water leaks during the first three months of 2018.”

In a report to be discussed by the infrastruc­ture and engineerin­g portfolio committee today, executive director Walter Shaidi says the city responded to 41 170 water complaints between July 1 last year and March 31.

“Of these complaints, 35 537 were completed and 5 597 remain outstandin­g as a backlog.”

He writes that the municipali­ty receives on average 150 complaints daily. The response time for dealing with complaints varies.

Burst pipes are attended to within 24 hours, while minor leaks take between 10 to 15 working days to fix.

Shaidi writes that this is exacerbate­d by the unavailabi­lity of resources to attend to the complaints.

“The biggest factor is the lack of sufficient maintenanc­e teams to respond rapidly to reported complaints.

Infrastruc­ture and engineerin­g portfolio head Masixole Zinto said they had filled 39 out of 51 vacancies in the plumbing division.

The aim was to fill all 12 vacancies at the start of the next financial year, he said.

 ?? Picture: WERNER HILLS ?? RUNNING DOWN: Nelson Mandela Bay’s main water supply dam, the Kouga, stands at 10.37% of capacity
Picture: WERNER HILLS RUNNING DOWN: Nelson Mandela Bay’s main water supply dam, the Kouga, stands at 10.37% of capacity

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