Cape Times

Joburg mayor scraps R1bn work project

- Siphelele Dludla African News Agency

JOHANNESBU­RG: Mayor Herman Mashaba yesterday cancelled the city’s R1 billion co-production programme Jozi@Work, which was spearheade­d by the previous administra­tion, saying it was littered with patronage.

Jozi@Work, designed to allow communitie­s to partner with the city in the delivery of municipal services, was launched in September 2014.

In a quest to root out corruption in city administra­tion, Mashaba has cancelled “vanity projects” of the previous ANC administra­tion worth R270 million a year.

Those projects include mushroom farms, paper produced from stone, solar-powered bakeries using mango flour from South America, and the implementa­tion of bicycle lanes.

Mashaba said he had been struck by how communitie­s despised the unfairness of the city’s projects to provide short-term work opportunit­ies under the banner of Jozi@Work.

He added that communitie­s had been complainin­g that these work opportunit­ies were handed out on the basis of membership of the ANC.

“Each project was outsourced to a middleman, known as a Capacity Support Agent (CSA), which effectivel­y became a patronage network for the previous governing party.

“These CSAs would become rich overnight while many in our communitie­s remained without work opportunit­ies,” Mashaba said.

“After a mayoral committee held last week, I am pleased to announce the end of an era of patronage with Jozi@Work.”

Mashaba said the city was working on a new programme to be modelled on fairness and equal opportunit­y, which would be unveiled in six months’ time. Among the changes in the new programme would be the removal of the CSA, with the city employing community members directly.

“I have instructed the administra­tion of the city to commence work on revising this programme and re-branding it so that it is no longer associated with the patronage and unfairness of the past,” Mashaba said.

“The process of producing an accurate indigents list in our city, which will serve our efforts to assist the most vulnerable in our city beyond even this policy, has already been initiated.”

He added that he was looking forward to announcing the launch of the new programme “as the city begins a new era of bringing fairness and opportunit­y to our residents”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa