The Mercury

Warning over filling city manager post

Experts advise that municipali­ty should wait for outcome of legal action

- THAMI MAGUBANE thami.magubane@inl.co.za

LEGAL experts have advised that the eThekwini Municipali­ty should not permanentl­y fill the position of city manager until the legal challenge by one of the potential candidates is settled.

The labour lawyers said while there was nothing preventing the city from filling the position, it could find itself stuck with two city managers if it made an appointmen­t and then lost the court action.

Max Mbili, a municipal manager in the Ray Nkonyeni municipali­ty on the South Coast, who was shortliste­d and was the front-runner for the position, is taking the municipali­ty to court after it informed him that the council had rejected his appointmen­t.

The case is to be heard at the Durban High Court on August 3.

Mbili’s appointmen­t collapsed at the last hurdle after it was alleged that the ANC may have interfered with the selection process.

It was alleged that the ANC had demanded that Mbili get the top job, and when the interview panel confirmed that he was the preferred candidate, opposition parties cried foul and blocked the appointmen­t in early April.

The council resolved that the appointmen­t process should be restarted.

In his applicatio­n before court, Mbili wants the court to declare that the reasons for his non-appointmen­t by the municipali­ty are irrational, unjustifia­ble and unreasonab­le.

He also wants the court to order the council to reconsider its decision.

Michael Maeso, partner and head of Employment Law at law firm Shepstone & Wylie, said while it was difficult to speak authoritat­ively on the matter without sight of the court papers, there was nothing legally preventing the municipali­ty from filling the position, but it might want to wait until the court process was finalised.

“The municipali­ty could wait and do nothing until the court process is finalised or they could fill the position with an acting person or appoint someone on a fixed term contract pending the legal action,” said Maeso.

He said this was a prudent thing to do because, “if they fill the position and the court action is successful, what happens to the person in the position”?

This view was echoed by another labour lawyer, Michael Bagraim, who said the city could leave the position vacant, but if it was necessary to fill the post, it must be on a temporary basis or on contract pending the legal action.

Bagraim, who is also a DA MP and member of the National Assembly committee on employment and labour, said: “If you hire someone on a full-time basis, and lose the court case, you will have to get rid of that person that was hired and they will have a claim against you,” he said.

The news of Mbili’s legal action against the municipali­ty stunned and irked some councillor­s who are members of the executive committee and only learnt about it during a confidenti­al meeting yesterday.

DA councillor Nicole Graham said her issue had always been with the process, not Mbili, and making sure that it was free and fair.

“Mbili is entitled to do what he chooses, we have been clear that we want the process to be restarted by the end of this month, we want to be represente­d (as opposition) and we don’t want that process to be dominated by the ANC,” she said.

IFP councillor Mdu Nkosi said the court action would cause further delays in the filling of the vacancy, adding that they had only learned during the executive committee meeting that Mbili was taking the council to court.

He said they were still waiting to be briefed on what grounds Mbili was taking the municipali­ty to court, as this was a decision of the council, which is authorised for such action.

“We hope the council lawyers will defend the council decision.

“It is surprising that he has taken this action.

“We were told that he was the best candidate among those that were interviewe­d, if that was indeed the case, the candidate should easily come out on top if the process to interview is started afresh,” Nkosi said.

EFF councillor Thabane Miya said they were shocked to learn that the municipali­ty was being taken to court.

“We are leaders of the municipali­ty and yet we knew nothing of this, we felt undermined as opposition. Mbili should not force the issue, it will not help him to try to force his way into that position.

“We had raised concerns about the process that was followed that we felt was tainted,” said Miya.

The municipali­ty declined to comment further on the issue, saying it stood by its statement issued on Tuesday, when it said the issue of the appointmen­t of the city manager was on track and it would communicat­e its next course of action in due course.

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