The Herald (Zimbabwe)

City gets $5,4m for road rehab

- Innocent Ruwende Senior Reporter

HARARE has so far received $5,4 million from the Government under the Emergency Roads Rehabilita­tion Programme after its roads were declared a state of disaster in February.

Council, which engaged several contractor­s, has completed the road patching phase which started in April this year.

It is now embarking on the second phase of the road works which entails roads reconstruc­tion, rehabilita­tion, resealing, overlaying and marking.

Presenting capital and revenue estimates for 2018 and the city’s capital developmen­t plan for 2019 to 2022, Finance and Developmen­t Committee chairperso­n, Councillor Luckson Mukunguma said the city engaged a number of contractor­s to carry out road works.

“Commendabl­e work has been done by these contractor­s and I report that a number of roads have been reconstruc­ted, overlaid and resealed, among them High Glen Road in Glen Norah, Gletywin Road in Gletywin, Harare Drive in Chisipite, Rekayi Tangwena in the central business district, Saint George Road in Waterfalls, Ardbennie Road in Mbare, Willowvale Road in Willowvale, 8th Avenue, 11th Avenue and Glen View Way in Glen View, to mention a few,” he said.

In its 2018 budget, Harare allocated $12 million to roads and maintenanc­e programmes which the city says should be carried out in a manner which is sustainabl­e and less costly to the city.

“It, therefore, behoves the city to fully capacitate its roads maintenanc­e teams and steer clear of hiring plant, equipment and machinery,” said Clr Mukunguma.

“Council will indeed be seized with programmes to render zones fully functional before end of 2018 and the envisaged retooling exercise as targeted in the 2017 and 2018 budget is particular­ly instructiv­e.”

In February, President Mugabe officially declared a state of disaster on Harare’s roads and road infrastruc­ture through a notice published in the Government Gazette.

The road network had not had any meaningful routine maintenanc­e over the last 15 years and the heavy rains left the road network in a bad state.

Local Government, Rural Developmen­t and National Housing Minister Saviour Kasukuwere announced the President’s declaratio­n in the Government Gazette at the time.

Minister Kasukuwere, together with his Transport and Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t counterpar­t Dr Joram Gumbo, toured the damaged roads and concluded that they were in a state of disaster.

This prompted Government interventi­on, with the rehabilita­tion of the roads starting with Seke Road, which had some stretches becoming impassable.

Government said it would assist the City of Harare to rehabilita­te the capitals’ 5 000-km road network, as it became clear that the local authority alone had no capacity to do the job.

 ??  ?? Minister Gumbo
Minister Gumbo
 ??  ?? Minister Kasukuwere
Minister Kasukuwere

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