Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Half of Bulawayo schools operate without water

- Andile Tshuma Sunday News Reporter

MORE than half of Bulawayo’s schools are operating without water after council disconnect­ed supplies due to non-payment of rates amid reports that they owe council a combined $100 million while those connected are having to make do with intermitte­nt supplies owing to water shedding.

The Bulawayo City Council says 72 of the city’s 86 schools that are not run by the local authority had their water supplies disconnect­ed in August during the school holidays. Most of the schools are government schools with a few private schools also owing. Speaking to Sunday News last week, Bulawayo City Council’s Financial Services Department Director Mr Kimpton Ndimande said some schools had come forward to make payment plans and have since had water supplies restored. However, 41 schools are still dry. Mr Ndimande said the city was forced to take drastic measures after multiple attempts to encourage the schools to pay had failed.

He said the council’s strategy to disconnect water supplies during the holidays was to allow schools enough time to make payment arrangemen­ts during the term recess in order to ensure that learning was not disrupted when schools reopened. “We don’t want to disrupt their programmes. Those children are our children and we want them to learn. Therefore, the decision to suspend water supply during the holiday was meant to give the school an opportunit­y to regularise its standing way before schools open so that by the time the term resumes, water supply would have been restored and learning was not disrupted. However, it is unfortunat­e that we have tried numerous times to engage most of the schools on their debt, however, they have not been forthcomin­g, we then came to the decision of disconnect­ing water supplies in order to encourage them to pay,” said Mr Ndimande.

He said his department was considerin­g engaging the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education provincial office on the matter and said in previous years, the ministry had intervened and made schools pay.

“In the past we have even gone to the regional education office, and in the past, the office intervened and urged schools to pay up and that really helped. After that we thought we could exchange cheques with Government but schools could not be part of that exercise as they have independen­t accounts and are responsibl­e for their day-to-day running. So, we are considerin­g going back to the regional office and to engage them on this matter,” said Mr Ndimande.

Bulawayo City Council Acting Finance Manager Revenue in the financial Services Department Mr Euther Siziba said the water disconnect­ion exercise at schools had helped council so far recover 21 percent of what was owed by schools, after a total payment of $21 million had been made since August.

He said the 41 schools that had not yet made efforts to pay or make an arrangemen­t included Hugh Beadle, Milton Junior, Sobukhazi, Lobengula Secondary, Mpopoma High School, Lochview, Trenance, Newmansfor­d, Amaswazi, Sikhulile, Helemu and Fusi Primary.

Mr Siziba said sometimes council ended up reopening water supplies even when schools had snubbed any communicat­ion channels extended for negotiatio­n, saying it was done to ensure that learners had access to water and learning was not disrupted.

He said the 41 schools had not yet come forward to negotiate payment arrangemen­ts with council, a situation he described as worrying. Only 21 schools out of the 72 have since made a payment or promise to pay.

“We are open for dialogue with schools and we hope that they will make use of all the available channels of communicat­ion so that arrangemen­ts are made. This money is needed so that as a council we are able to render quality services to the residents of the city and without that revenue coming, our ability to offer quality services is drasticall­y reduced. There are some private schools but the majority are Government and as it is we are considerin­g engaging the provincial education office. Government is not much involved in the payment system for schools, the schools have to come and engage us and make payment plans so that we can restore supply in order not to inconvenie­nce the learners,” he said.

The situation has seen some schools asking pupils to bring water from home, which has raised the ire of parents.

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