Daily Dispatch

Business and jobs on the line in Butterwort­h

Week-long blackout with no explanatio­n from Eskom has cost dearly in ruined goods, lost trade

- TED KEENAN

Extension 7 in Butterwort­h has been without power for a week, and businesses, people and government department­s are taking strain.

The mixed-use suburb houses the fire and ambulance service, several industries and flats owned by the Eastern Cape Developmen­t Corporatio­n.

Butterwort­h Fresh Produce Market manager Mervyn Wessels said the company’s generator could not cope in the heat last week, and most of his frozen stock melted and rotted.

“My concern, aside from our financial losses at a time when we can ill afford it, is that the fire and ambulance services are not contactabl­e on a landline.

“If there is an emergency people have to phone the police station, which relays a call to the fire or ambulance staff, or the police have to drive to them with a message.”

He said he had been phoning to report the fault to Eskom since last Monday without any action.

The Dispatch has phoned Eskom’s

Butterwort­h emergency number repeatedly since Friday, but the calls have gone unanswered.

Barry Beckermann, a director of Border Metal Industries (BMI), said rumours regarding the causes of the blackout ranged from a blown substation to Mnquma being switched off for not paying their Eskom bills.

“Whatever the cause, when we opened on Wednesday after the year-end break we had to send our 60 staff members back home.”

Mnquma spokespers­on Loyiso Mpalantsha­ne said he had been unaware of the problem, but pointed out rumours of Eskom penalising the town because of unpaid bills were unlikely to be correct.

“If there was any substance to it, Eskom would have shut off the whole municipali­ty, not just one area,” Mpalantsha­ne said.

BMI manager Chris Colin said most of the larger companies in Extension 7 industrial area had closed their doors, as had the vehicle testing and licencing department.

Beckermann said Eskom’s failure to notify the companies of the outage was costing industry a fortune through lost production.

“We cannot catch up on a lost week without incurring expensive overtime.

“What was really irritating was Eskom’s call centre staff.

“When I eventually got hold of them on Wednesday I was informed that the utility was aware of the problem but that there was no indication in the system of any action to fix it.

“What I was told was that there were other priorities.”

“If this is indicative of Eskom’s attitude to future problems, then profitable manufactur­ing and job creation in 2020 is going to be a struggle.

“We certainly could not keep going and 60 people will be without jobs.”

 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? STYMIED: Border Metal Industries, above, has had no power for a week, so no steel structure manufactur­ing has been able to take place.
Picture: SUPPLIED STYMIED: Border Metal Industries, above, has had no power for a week, so no steel structure manufactur­ing has been able to take place.

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