Residents plan to shut down Bhisho over tariffs
Another showdown between Bhisho residents and Buffalo City Metro is looming as the impasse over rates appears not to have been resolved.
Chaos erupted in the town in 2019 when police fired rubber bullets and teargas at hundreds of protesters demanding that the cost of electricity be dramatically reduced.
Members of the Bhisho Rates and Services Payers Association (Braspa) clashed with police as main roads into the town city were barricaded with burning tyres and rubbish, causing major traffic delays.
Now the association is planning to shut down the town again unless its demands are met.
They had demanded that their water-related debts be erased and electricity tariffs reduced by cutting items embedded in the tariff structure.
“A task team was formed to tackle these issues last year, but yielded no results,” Braspa chair Mxolisi Noyila said on Tuesday. “In June 2019, Cogta MEC Fikile Xasa facilitated a meeting... commitments were made, but BCM did not honour them.”
He said that on Monday alone he had received about 100 complaints from Bhisho and Tyutyu villagers about high rates.
“We have discovered that there’s a punitive tariff for consumers who exceed water usage. This is unacceptable because we were not consulted.
“The mayor admitted that the metering system has flaws.
“Now how do they charge penalties based on wrong information?” Noyila said.
Noyila, residents, the local community police forum and other stakeholders held a meeting on Thursday to discuss ways to force BCM to address their issues.
“The meeting resolved that a clear communique stating our decision to boycott the next elections be directed to the premier and Calata House.”
“We will engage schools to discuss ways to avoid compromising learners’ access to education, especially Grade 12, as we intend shutting down everything in Bhisho until our demands are met,” he said.
A community meeting will be held on September 25 to finalise plans on the shutdown.
BCM spokesperson Samkelo Ngwenya said the municipality “has a cordial relationship with the Bhisho residents.
“With executive mayor Xola Pakati leading the meetings, we set up task teams to resolve all the service delivery issues raised and these have been resolved and continue being attended to,” he said.
“We even opened operations on weekends, and our managers have direct contacts with Braspa representatives.
“One must keep in mind that during lockdown there were no meter readings.
“However, to solve the issue of readings on a short-term basis we have [taken on] more than 100 meter readers.”
Ngwenya said the accounts that were said not to have been read were charged on an interim average consumption. Interim charges were reversed once readings were captured.
Residents were encouraged to submit their readings to meterreading@buffalocity.gov.za.
Smart meters were also being rolled out, he said.