The Herald (South Africa)

Metro faces hurdles in eradicatio­n of bucket toilets

- Siyabonga Sesant sesants@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

THE Nelson Mandela Bay municipali­ty is in a race against time as it scrambles to rid the metro of bucket toilets ahead of an extended deadline in a month’s time.

A total of R40-million has been put aside for the ambitious undertakin­g.

The municipali­ty had already missed the December 2017 deadline set by mayor Athol Trollip in his inaugural speech in August 2016.

There are 8 562 bucket toilets in the municipali­ty, down from more than 30 000 in April 2015, municipal spokesman Mthubanzi Mniki said.

“The municipali­ty has come a long way in its ultimate attempt to eradicate bucket toilets. However, there still remain fundamenta­l challenges preventing the total eradicatio­n of buckets,” he said.

He said one of the many stumbling blocks was a lack of buy-in from at least 14 communitie­s.

Other hurdles included the removal of backyard dwellings, private land challenges and human settlement relocation obstacles.

“By removing a bucket toilet and replacing it with a temporary, communal, standalone or waterless toilet, some communitie­s assume that it implies they will stay in shacks for far longer,” Mniki said.

“As part of the public participat­ion programme to roll out this project, we are working hard to convince the communitie­s that an alternativ­e toilet facility is the way to go while you are waiting for formal housing delivery.

“The beneficiar­y list and the associated relocation programme are critical in order for households to be moved onto serviced sites.

“This will prevent land invasion and vandalism of the sites.

“Prioritisa­tion of this relocation programme is requiring attention to speed up the bucket eradicatio­n programme.

“However, due to disagreeme­nts among people themselves about relocation, the finalisati­on of the list and implementa­tion of the relocation process ends up being delayed.

“This directly affects the eradicatio­n of bucket toilets.”

Mniki said a number of communitie­s were unwilling to move.

“Much progress has been achieved in terms of relocation of beneficiar­ies. However, the municipali­ty is not satisfied with the speed,” he said.

The municipali­ty has listed nine wards where it says people are no longer using bucket toilets.

These include Ward 31 in Missionval­e, Ward 33 in Kleinskool, and Ward 37 in Bethelsdor­p.

 ??  ?? BROKEN RELIC: A bucket system toilet
BROKEN RELIC: A bucket system toilet

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