Cape Argus

R128m bus tender lies in limbo

Forensic probe into procuremen­t of electric MyCiTi vehicles

- Jason Felix

AWHOPPING R128 million for the procuremen­t of electric MyCiTi buses is now in limbo as movement on the contentiou­s tender, which already led to the suspension of a senior official, is at the mercy of a forensic investigat­ion.

The City of Cape Town’s 2018/19 capital adjustment­s budget was approved by the council yesterday. An amount of R443.8m has been included in the adjustment­s budget.

Mayco member for finance Johan van der Merwe said unspent funds were not lost, but were added to the current capital budget.

The adjusted amount brings the City’s current capital budget for 2018/19 to about R8.85 billion.

The unspent R128m was part of a total R484m adjusted budget for the 2018/19 financial year. The adjusted budget, tabled at yesterday’s full council meeting, represents money that was not spent in the previous financial year of 2017/18 and was now transferre­d.

On the buses, mayco committee member for transport and urban developmen­t Brett Herron said the first tests on Hospital Bend initially failed.

“We made the changes on the buses. We tested it again and it was given the green light. The bus had to go to Pretoria for testing (at the SA Bureau of Standards) and that has been done. The project can’t go ahead because of the Bowman’s investigat­ion into the tender,” Herron said.

ANC councillor Bheki Hadebe said the issue with the buses had been clouded by controvers­y. “This is exactly why there is an investigat­ion into this matter.

“We were told that this project date was in October; a year later the first bus was delivered.

Then it took another year for it to be tested. The bus could not even go up Hospital Bend. It couldn’t drive 60km/h. Now you want to come here and ask us to approve this. It can’t be right. Take that bus back to China,” he said.

Mayor Patricia de Lille said adjustment­s to the capital budget for directorat­e and department­al submission­s totalled R484.9m.

“There was an additional recommenda­tion by mayco to reduce the capital adjustment budget by R41.5m related to the grant for the disaster management of the drought, and therefore the total capital adjustment budget is R443.4m.

“Some of the reasons for the roll-overs across directorat­es are vendors not delivering goods by June 30 despite the fact that orders were placed timeously, supply constraint­s on imported equipment and projects delayed due to poor contractor performanc­e,” she said.

De Lille said capital grant roll-overs amounting to R172.1m were proposed in the 2018/19 financial year.

Roll-overs of approved 2017/18 private donations and unspent grant allocation­s from provincial government amounted to R250.6m and were proposed for inclusion in the 2018/19 operating budget, De Lille said.

The Safety and Security Department had R2.8m roll-over proposed for the appointmen­t of the “Rent-a-Cop” initiative.

It was funded by SA Breweries and formed part of the holistic Alcohol Game Changer interventi­on.

The agreement was signed in the latter part of the 2017/18 financial year but there were delays, De Lille said.

There has also been a R951 908 roll-over proposed in the area-based directorat­es for the community developmen­t workers project, funded by the province.

ACDP councillor Demetrius Dudley described the adjustment­s budget as a fiscal dump.

“They have failed to show that they can spend the money. This points to poor leadership, poor management and poor controls. It seems that the City is more worried about buying printers and office equipment.

“How do we spend R79 000 on furniture? How will that help the residents of this City? We have seen that auditor general report on R47m irregular expenditur­e. And where did that hurt the DA? In their pride,” he said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa