The Citizen (Gauteng)

Emfuleni water stinks to high heaven

- Amanda Watson

The current crisis of sewage being pumped into the Vaal River has been building for at least 10 years under the Emfuleni municipali­ty, according to a local NGO.

And the job of looking after or trying to repair broken infrastruc­ture became harder with the municipali­ty this week confirming it was not renewing a contract for a fleet of 150 vehicles it allegedly had on rental.

According to Emfuleni spokespers­on Stanley Gaba, “services delivery teams are working as usual” but were still faced with a shortage of vehicles, which would affect turnaround time for complaints including electricit­y, water, waste management and sanitation.

It’s a spanner in the works for Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Minister Zweli Mkhize, who told parliament he had identified “87 distressed and dysfunctio­nal municipali­ties” to which he would be sending “102 artisans and process controller­s” as well as “81 new engineers and town planners to municipali­ties that are struggling with infrastruc­ture and maintenanc­e”.

“There are more than 230 apprentice­s hosted by municipali­ties for support with operations and maintenanc­e,” Mkhize said this week.

However, the promised help hasn’t come soon enough, said Maureen Stewart, vice-chairperso­n of Save Our Vaal action group.

“In fact, the situation has to reach a crisis point before any serious action is taken.

“It’s been going on for years. We have been fighting sewage pollution for about 10 years. In that time, the department of water and sanitation (DWS) has completely abrogated its responsibi­lity in terms of raw water resources.”

In August, the DWS referred to a 2010 study it had initiated when it went to investigat­e reports of dead fish. “Preliminar­y investigat­ions indicated the absence of any dead fish at the alleged site and that the incident occurred a week before where there was a drastic drop in temperatur­e.

“To date the department has issued five notices and six directives to the municipali­ty in relation to the sewer spillages along the Sedibeng sewer scheme,” DWS said, showing it knew of the problems.

Save Our Vaal obtained nine court orders against the municipali­ty – the most recent in February – in the form of a “structural interdict”.

It required the municipali­ty to immediatel­y prevent discharges of sewage, to fix infrastruc­ture and to report back to the court on its compliance with the order – which it hasn’t, Save or Vaal said.

The department had not responded to queries.

See also page 24

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