The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Council to hire traffic expert

- Innocent Ruwende Senior Reporter

HARARE City Council is set to recruit a chief traffic transporta­tion planner to deal with the chaos obtaining in the Central Business District and other parts of the city where congestion is now the order of the day at intersecti­ons, especially during peak hours.

The problem has been largely attributed to many malfunctio­ning traffic lights that have gone for months without being repaired and pirate taxis, commuter omnibuses and vendors that have congested streets.

The obtaining situation will hamper Harare from achieving its ambition of becoming a world class city by 2025 if nothing is done soon.

According to the City of Harare, a world class city is one that has eight or more attributes of a modern city.

City corporate communicat­ions manager Mr Michael Chideme said the city was strengthen­ing its systems to improve service delivery.

“We are strengthen­ing our systems,” he said.

“This sector has been our Achilles’ heel for some time. We want to make our roads trafficabl­e and have proper transporta­tion planning gurus to achieve a world class city.”

The chief traffic and transporta­tion planner will be under the City Planning Division of the Department of Works and responsibl­e for the overall provision of leadership in the formulatio­n and implementa­tion of policies applicable to traffic and transporta­tion systems in the City of Harare.

The incumbent will also assist the city planner in the formulatio­n and implementa­tion of traffic and transporta­tion policies, strategies and systems in a sustainabl­e way.

She or he will also advise on proposals for medium and longterm developmen­t of the city’s traffic and transporta­tion systems, manage city roads trafficabi­lity, implements statutory duties in terms of Road Traffic Act and municipal by-laws and produce traffic and transporta­tion master and local plans.

The chief traffic transporta­tion will also manage billboard advertisin­g amid reports that the city could be losing thousands of dollars in that area.

Last year, an audit of bill boards in greater Harare showed that poor management of billboard records by the city was costing it thousands of dollars as some companies were erecting billboards for free.

Apart from 1 103 registered billboards, there were an extra 300 billboards on private properties that were excluded from the city’s billing platform.

The city is raking in $3,6 million annually in advertisin­g revenue from seven companies it signed deals with, but could be losing thousands from those illegally erecting billboards.

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