Sunday World (South Africa)

Over 50% of Emfuleni’s water goes down the drain

Municipali­ty says the wastage has cost it R500m

- By Bongani Mdakane bongani@sundayworl­d.co.za

Embattled Emfuleni local municipali­ty in the Sedibeng region can’t account for 57% of the water it purchased in the 2020/21 financial year, with the cash-strapped municipali­ty having lost R500-million worth of water in the process.

This informatio­n is contained in the municipali­ty’s annual report.

According to council officials, the water wastage was the result of Emfuleni’s Metsi Lekwa water and sanitation department’s lack of a water demand and supply management strategy.

“There was no plan to safeguard loss of water as the strategy was not in place, hence there was such a waste of millions of rand in clean running water getting wasted. There are water and sewerage leaks in many parts of Emfuleni, and nothing is being done to put a stop on the waste of water,” said an official in the municipali­ty.

The auditor-general also flagged irregulari­ties, which she said the municipali­ty had failed to prevent. These irregulari­ties cost the Emfuleni over R191-million in interest and penalties for late payments to Eskom, Rand Water and other service providers.

An additional R80-million worth of wasteful expenditur­e was also flagged in the annual report. This was due to supply chain non-compliance, with tenders being issued through deviations.

DA spokesman on water and sanitation in Emfuleni Daddy Mollo said the municipali­ty has been losing millions of litres of expensive treated water because it does not maintain its infrastruc­ture. “Adopting effective water control measures is a smart investment that will ease the burden on consumers, preserve water resources and set the standard for responsibl­e governance and resource protection,” he said.

Emfuleni municipali­ty has been poisoning the Vaal River, South Africa’s second-biggest river and source of half of Gauteng’s water, for more than a decade due to its dysfunctio­nal treatment plants.

The municipali­ty’s mayor, Sipho Radebe, in the foreword of the report, said: “Critical and scarce skills in the municipali­ty continue to affect the provision of effective and efficient services, for instance electricit­y, water and sanitation functions require more technical skills and in this case there is a shortage of skilled personnel who can assist the municipali­ty in rendering quality services to the people.”

Emfuleni spokespers­on Makhosonke Sangweni said the municipali­ty is addressing the issue. “At the last council meeting, a resolution was adopted to embark on a process to investigat­e unauthoris­ed, irregular, fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e,” he said.

“Thus the auditor-general report has been referred to the municipal public accounts committee for further scrutiny and recommenda­tions for remedial steps and possible consequenc­e management based on their deliberati­ons,” he said.

 ?? / Gallo Images ?? Emfuleni municipali­ty has been experienci­ng water and sewerage leaks for many areas.
/ Gallo Images Emfuleni municipali­ty has been experienci­ng water and sewerage leaks for many areas.

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