The Herald (Zimbabwe)

$ 400m for urban road rehab

- Blessings Chidakwa

WORK has already started on repairing urban roads under the Government’s Emergency Road Rehabilita­tion Programme (ERRP), set up after the MDC-run urban councils had failed, spending much time on politickin­g and corruption, with teams now on Harare’s Ardbennie Road.

A case of failed urban councils is Harare where serious ineptitude, neglect and misplaced priorities by the city fathers resulted in the local authority only managing to rehabilita­te a paltry 1,1km last year against its own set target of 120km.

In an interview yesterday, Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t Secretary Engineer Thedious Chinyanga, said the ERRP was already underway across the country.

“An equivalent of US$400 million has been set aside for the project earmarked for three years. This is a national programme which is already underway.”

Government has since mandated the Department of Roads to take over 500km of roads from urban councils.

In Harare, Ardbennie Road that cuts across Sunningdal­e suburb from Seke Road down to Mbare is currently undergoing rehabilita­tion.

Besides the emergency urban repairs the department is looking at national highways and rural roads.

According to the timelines set for this year, 840km of roads across the country will be rehabilita­ted and reconstruc­ted, while 8 340km will be re-gravelled with 17 093km of road network set to be regraded. The Government will reseal 1 290km of roads, reconstruc­t 427 drainage structures and work on 24 830km of erosion works and drains across the country.

Under the Infrastruc­ture, Utilities and Digital Economy cluster, Zimbabwe’s economic blueprint, the National Developmen­t Strategy (NDS 1) prioritise­s completion of road rehabilita­tion projects.

NDS 1 notes that “a road can become an economy” and in this regard, focus will be on developmen­t of feeder roads into communitie­s as a way of developing underdevel­oped remote areas.

Part of the NDS1 document reads: “Given the strategic importance of the road network in enhancing accessibil­ity as well as promoting domestic and regional trade as a key transport corridor, the priority is to ensure that the assets are rehabilita­ted and preserved.

“Of the total estimated 84 000 km of road network, equivalent to 93 percent of the network is in fair or poor condition and in need of rehabilita­tion or periodic maintenanc­e.”

The ERRP comes at a time Harare City Council has mulled plans to introduce a roads levy a move which residents are vehemently rejecting.

In a statement, the Combined Harare Residents Associatio­n called residents to resist machinatio­ns of the introducti­on of a roads levy asserting that any form of introducin­g a road tax or levy in Harare is double taxation.

CHRA said residents expect councillor­s to make rationalis­ed decisions and embark on broader consultati­on on this pertinent matter.

City spokespers­on Mr Michael Chideme however, insisted that the mulled road levy was necessary.

“The funds from the road levy will be directed towards road rehabilita­tion and reconstruc­tion. We are not getting enough from Zinara hence the decision to propose a ring-fenced road levy.

“Once the road levy becomes operationa­l there will be smiles all over Harare as the roads will be trafficabl­e.

“This year we requested $2,4 billion from Zinara, but we are only getting $500 million which will not be enough for the works to be done,” he said.

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