Sowetan

283 land spaces to relocate people displaced by KZN floods

De Lille acknowledg­es importance of maintenanc­e

- By Andisiwe Makinana

Public works and infrastruc­ture minister Patricia de Lille says more than 280 land parcels have been identified in KwaZulu-Natal for the resettleme­nt of communitie­s displaced by the devastatin­g floods in the province last month.

De Lille told parliament on Tuesday her department has identified 258 land parcels and 25 land parcels have been identified by the provincial department of public works and human settlement­s. The land was being assessed for suitabilit­y to relocate people by the housing developmen­t agency.

The minister was tabling her department’s budget for the 2022/23 financial year to parliament.

She said department­al resources will also focus on 53 government-owned buildings in KwaZulu-Natal and 12 in the Eastern Cape damaged by the floods to make them usable.

To date, 52 sites in KwaZuluNat­al are in need of bridges. Constructi­on of the first 18 bridges in that province will begin on June 1, said De Lille.

In the Eastern Cape, technical assessment­s have been done at 20 bridge sites.

De Lille said her department has reassigned more capacity to assist the two provinces’ department­s of transport and affected municipali­ties in this regard.

In his State of the Nation Address in February, President Cyril Ramaphosa announced the government would be upscaling its Welisizwe rural bridges programme and will build 95 bridges in the new financial year.

De Lille said these would be constructe­d in the Eastern Cape, Mpumalanga, Limpopo, the North West, the Free State and KwaZulu-Natal.

“Earlier this month, together with the minister of defence and military veterans [Thandi Modise and the KwaZulu-Natal department of public works, we handed over the latest three completed bridges in KwaZulu-Natal,” she said.

De Lille said as part of the reconstruc­tion efforts in KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape, after the floods, a database of more than 300 built environmen­t profession­als has been made available to the department of cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs to help assess, cost, design and implement critical reconstruc­tion of damaged infrastruc­ture.

She acknowledg­ed that recent events laid bare the importance of infrastruc­ture and ensuring the government does not only build new infrastruc­ture but maintains existing facilities while taking the severe impacts of climate change into considerat­ion.

De Lille said the infrastruc­ture investment plan, which was central to the economic reconstruc­tion and recovery plan and aimed at creating jobs, has started bringing the constructi­on industry back to life.

About the national infrastruc­ture plan (NIP) 2050 gazetted in March, De Lille said this was a long-term plan for infrastruc­ture developmen­t across the country to ensure there is the necessary long-term view regarding infrastruc­ture to drive economic and social transforma­tion to achieve national developmen­t plan goals and beyond.

“We have started the implementa­tion of the first three years of the NIP 2050.”

She said an additional R1.6trillion in public sector infrastruc­ture investment is required by 2030, over and above what is forecast for current public sector entities.

“This will be achieved by, among other efforts, building private sector confidence in the capacity and capability of the state to deliver bankable public infrastruc­ture projects.”

 ?? /SANDILE NDLOVU ?? A bridge collapsed on Ntuzuma road at Nhlungwane.
/SANDILE NDLOVU A bridge collapsed on Ntuzuma road at Nhlungwane.

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