The Citizen (KZN)

City’s ‘costly’ workshop

OPPOSITION: QUESTIONS WHY EVENT WAS NOT HELD IN POLOKWANE

- Alex Japho Matlala news@citizen.co.za

Councillor­s attend training 180km away ‘while city had many suitable venues’.

The Polokwane municipali­ty in Limpopo is defending allegation­s that an “expensive” councillor induction training workshop, held about 180km away in Bela-Bela, was wasteful expenditur­e aimed at milking municipal funds dry.

The council pooh-poohed the allegation­s yesterday, branding them as totally devoid of the truth.

The brouhaha surroundin­g the training comes after the decision by the municipali­ty to hold a three day-training workshop for councillor­s on issues related to the formation of a local Aids council and related issues.

The three-day training session was held from 14 to 16 September – and the choice of venue raised eyebrows. The DA was the first opposition party to raise concerns on the matter and also stopped all its councillor­s from attending the workshop.

On Wednesday, the Democratic Alliance (DA) submitted written questions to the speaker of the council, demanding answers why the municipali­ty chose to hold the workshop at an expensive venue outside Polokwane while the city had many suitable venues.

The party said at the core of its discontent was that the bill was footed from the public purse and that they money was spent at the time the city experience­d acute financial problems.

“The culture of hosting training workshops and municipal public account committee

sessions out of town must be stopped,” DA caucus leader Jacques Joubert said in a statement.

He said the municipali­ty has the new Peter Mokaba Stadium, Jack Botes Hall and numerous other halls that could be utilised at no additional expense.

“Municipal funds must be prioritise­d for critical service delivery shortfalls such as addressing water infrastruc­ture maintenanc­e during this water crisis,” said Joubert.

Polokwane and surroundin­g villages and townships such as Mankweng Turfloop, Seshego and Solomondal­e have not had adequate water provision for years, amid allegation­s of municipal financial constrains and claims of corruption in the Lepelle Northern Water – a state-owned utility responsibl­e for water provision in Limpopo.

Asked how much was spent on the workshop, municipal spokespers­on Thipa Selala said the council coughed out about R100 000 but that the event was budgeted for.

“The workshop is on Service Delivery and Budget Implementa­tion Plan.

“It was budgeted for as approved by council,” said Selala.

“The councillor­s as chairs and champions of this programme needed a comprehens­ive workshop at a secluded venue where they will not leave to attend to other matters.”

He said councillor­s would have still been able to assist their constituen­cies with service delivery issues, while attending “this important induction workshop”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa