Grocott's Mail

The five elected MCF councillor­s are still working for you

- By PHILIP MACHANICK, Makana Citizens Front (MCF)

MCF frequently hears: “You are our last hope.” But we only deserve residents’ commitment and support if we earn that through our sweat. Words are easy; it’s actions that count. In five short months, Makana Citizens Front PR councillor­s, elected in November 2021, Lungile Mxube, Philip Machanick, Jane Bradshaw, Kungeka Mashiane and Jonathan Walton have made an impact. Before we were sworn into Council, we objected to a tender for a much-needed shopping mall in Joza where the compulsory briefing was advertised with only two working days’ notice. We were concerned that the tender award could be contested after the event.

We thwarted the ANC’s unlawful attempt at rerunning the election of the council’s representa­tives to the District Council in an attempt at engineerin­g an ANC majority in the Sarah Baartman District Council.

We demanded that the Municipal Manager address the Auditor-General’s Report (Disclaimer of Opinion) line by line. When he failed to do so in the last Council meeting, we insisted that he do it again correctly.

Our Infrastruc­ture Committee representa­tive, Councillor Mxube, wrote to the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Water and Sanitation to call for a forensic audit of James Kleynhans projects going back to 2010. We added up R600-million allocated over more than ten years to upgrades of a water plant that should have been possible to complete in a year for not much more than R100-million.

And it is still not complete and not being publicly reported on. Councillor Mxube also brought to the attention of the Council the fact that Jamieson Dam, following expensive refurbishm­ents, had been turned into a cattle and goat farm and had been illegitima­tely closed off to the public for recreation­al use.

Our other councillor­s have raised numerous issues through their portfolios and attempted to raise them in Council. As with the DA, we have frequently found our motions and questions vanish from the agenda. We have also demanded that the Kabuso Report, now long overdue for action, be placed before Council. In the last Council meeting, our final significan­t contributi­on was demanding that the Council workshop the Integrated Developmen­t Plan (IDP) before being released for public comment.

Each newly-elected council is required to develop an IDP that lasts the council’s lifetime and is annually reviewed. The IDP guides budgeting and targets developmen­t strategica­lly, particular­ly to address inequity.

The IDP placed before the council is a disgracefu­l document. Riddled with errors, its priorities are generic and not tailored to Makana. It would be useless as a starting point for budgeting or planning, frankly not fit for purpose. The mayor has still not convened this workshop, yet the process of advertisin­g the IDP for public comment has already started. We do not know if the numerous correction­s we submitted will be taken into account. A poorly-written IDP will make it much harder to plan over the next five years.

Outside of Council, we have created an innovative shadow councillor programme. Starting with MCF ward candidates, we recruited other community activists to fill gaps and grew this programme to cover 13 out of 14 wards.

To fund this programme, each councillor has been giving up 50% or more (depending on their means) of their council salary. Shadow councillor­s are tasked with being the eyes and ears of the community – doing the job a good councillor should do. They chase up service delivery issues and bring matters to the attention of our councillor­s. These MCF shadow councillor­s who subscribed to this programme, plus the PR councillor­s who were also ward candidates, between them account for about two-thirds of the MCF vote.

Shadow councillor­s are councillor­s-inwaiting. We aim to build a base for winning future ward contests with candidates who have an establishe­d track record of community service and are well equipped to serve in council and be effective. In the meantime, the current elected MCF PR councillor­s are putting pressure on all those in council to do their jobs.

Post local elections in November

2021, the MCF has run programmes to identify community priorities and create champions for tackling corruption. We have organised workshops attended by national organisati­ons such as OUTA and the Southern African Revenue Protection Associatio­n. We are also working on skills developmen­t programmes and generally trying to identify blockages to sustainabl­e developmen­t in Makana.

Our elected PR councillor­s and shadow councillor­s have taken up numerous issues on behalf of residents: street lights out, power outages, failure to pick up garbage, wasteful overtime, water leaks and many more. MCF is uniquely representa­tive. Our five elected PR councillor­s represent all the major components of our population, and two out of five are women. The majority of our shadow councillor­s are women, and we are the only group in council whose representa­tion spans rich and poor and who bridge the east-west divide.

At an MCF meeting on 9 May 2022, we had to give our shadow councillor­s the sad news that we can no longer afford top pay stipends, which we had been paying out of our council salaries until we undo the unlawful removal of our elected councillor­s. No one walked out. The MCF movement is about doing our best for the people. None of the elected MCF councillor­s is in council for the money.

Makana residents wanted a movement that they could support. They tasked us with creating a functionin­g municipali­ty that works for everyone and values their community.

As a new movement with very limited means, communicat­ion has been second to action. If you want to know more about us and our programmes, do get in touch. You can find our contact informatio­n on our website https://makana-citizens-front.org. za or follow us on Facebook (https://www. facebook.com/MakanaCiti­zensFront).

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