Sunday Times

Free ride for Tshwane’s million-rand consultant­s

They’re charging up to R4,000 an hour but don’t pay for offices

- By CAIPHUS KGOSANA

● Consultant­s working for an engineerin­g firm hired by the City of Tshwane at R400m a year are using a prime city-owned building and all its resources for free.

GladAfrica is managing Tshwane’s infrastruc­ture projects in a three-year contract and with a budget of about R12bn. It has 30 consultant­s based in the city’s Infotech building in the suburb of Hatfield.

The consultant­s work in marketing and communicat­ions, systems planning, operations, legal, and finance. One of the projects is the city’s A Re Yeng bus rapid transit system.

Some consultant­s charge up to R4,000 an hour yet all use the resources in the municipal building, including telephones and internet, without paying.

An invoice submitted by the company in June shows that GladAfrica charged the city R14.8m for the month.

The Sunday Times reported last week that since November GladAfrica had billed R250m for work in the city’s roads and transport division.

City manager Moeketsi Mosola ignored warnings from the city’s CFO and other officials as well as legal advice not to hire the consultant­s, it is alleged.

Mosola this week defended his decision, but city insiders said it was difficult to verify the consultant­s’ billing hours.

The sources said that in the past consultant­s would produce time sheets that would be approved by senior officials before payments were made.

This had not been the case with

GladAfrica, they said.

“There are no time sheets, they just bill directly. They can claim for hours they have not worked,” said an official.

The city said the arrangemen­t was necessary for integratio­n and skills transfer.

“The nature of the contract and project management discipline in general requires integratio­n of client and project management teams to foster integratio­n and for ease of work, which could otherwise be hindered by teams being located in different offices. This is normal practice,” Mosola said. GladAfrica referred questions to the city. Umar Banda, the city’s CFO, had advised against contractin­g GladAfrica through a deal that guaranteed the company 10% in project management fees. He said it was against regulation­s to take money meant for building roads, clinics and maintainin­g other infrastruc­ture to pay commission­s to consultant­s.

In a report prepared for Tshwane’s executive adjudicati­on committee, which would decide whether to award the contract, Banda said that because GladAfrica was charging 10% in project management fees, it would be guaranteed R377m of the R3.7bn budgeted for capital expenditur­e in the 2018/2019 financial year, and R422m of the R4.2bn set aside for capital projects in the 2019/2020 financial year.

The fees due to GladAfrica would have to be ring-fenced by the department­s that needed building or maintenanc­e work done.

Banda pointed out that project management services provided by GladAfrica were operationa­l in nature and so the fees charged by the consultanc­y could not be taken out of Tshwane’s capital budget, which was to be used strictly for infrastruc­ture projects.

“Taking the above into considerat­ion, the group financial services department cannot support the ring-fencing of capital expenditur­e budget to fund the services of a profession­al service provider for project management services,” he said in the report.

Mosola, however, ignored this. He also dissolved the same executive adjudicati­on committee after it had advised against the move and replaced it with a new committee.

Mosola denied that he dissolved the committee, saying he only changed its name from executive adjudicati­on committee to bid adjudicati­on committee, in line with legislatio­n. New officials were added to the committee, he said.

Tshwane mayor Solly Msimanga said he has instituted an investigat­ion of the contract and this would determine what steps he would take.

ANC Tshwane chairman Kgosi Maepa has called on the city to suspend Mosola pending the outcome of an investigat­ion of the awarding of the contract. Such an investigat­ion should be conducted by the public protector, the party said.

 ?? Picture: Facebook ?? City of Tshwane manager Moeketsi Mosola with mayor Solly Msimanga.
Picture: Facebook City of Tshwane manager Moeketsi Mosola with mayor Solly Msimanga.

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