Blocked drains disrupt learning as toilets spill
LEARNING at Naluxolo Primary School in Samora Machel has been disrupted due to the blockage of a nearby drain that has caused 15 toilets to spill.
School Governing Body (SGB) chairperson Judy Davids said the City was alerted to the matter before the end of the first term.
Pupils who now attend school twice a week spend less than an hour on the premises due to the stench, she said.
“The drain has been blocked since toward the end of last year, and people of the City would come and fix it temporarily.
“Then it would start again, this time around they just ignored our calls.
“The drain has affected the entire school including the learning schedules of children.
“They spend less than an hour at school and that is very embarrassing because they cannot learn anything in less than an hour.
“The City needs to do something before something happens to the school,” said Davids.
Western Cape Education Department (WCED) spokesperson Bronagh Hammond said the school had been informed that safety issues in the area had delayed progress in the fixing.
“The school has reported it to the City of Cape Town for their attention. We await their action. The school has also approached the SAPS to support the municipal workers. Due to the issues with the drainage, which affect the school ablution facilities, the school thus has to close early each day for health and safety reasons. We will continue to engage with the City in this regard,” said Hammond.
The City yesterday said it was looking into the particulars of the matter and would respond in due course.
Meanwhile, residents in the Ethembeni informal settlement in Khayelitsha protested over a lack of basic services.
Community activist Bulelani Qolani said: “The City and the national Department of Human Settlements have made promises that they will provide us with water and sanitation, until today there is nothing at all.
“They were grandstanding because there were cameras. People here have to cross the street and go to the nearby bush to help themselves. My worry is that we have the disabled who struggle and many people, especially women, have been victims in the bushes at night,” said Qolani.