DA launches Take Back Your Power campaign in Ekurhuleni

Clarke stated that residents are being taxed heavily but staff are not hired to fulfill the municipality's constitutional obligations.

The Democratic Alliance (DA) in Ekurhuleni has called on residents to support its Take Back Your Power campaign to pressurise the ANC-led City of Ekurhuleni to deliver a more acceptable electricity service to its residents.

“A crisis that started many years ago at the ANC-led City of Ekurhuleni has reached breaking point with persistent electricity outages affecting areas all the way from Nigel to Germiston, leaving residents to freeze in the dark for prolonged periods,” said Michele Clarke MP, DA Germiston Constituency Head, during a digital press briefing held on Tuesday about the ongoing power outages in Ekurhuleni.

“The Ekurhuleni metro, by its own admissions, suffers more than 1 500 unplanned outages a day, overwhelming its limited technical staff and leaving whole areas and sometimes whole towns without power for days on end.

“On Friday alone, much of Daveyton was subjected to a devastatingly disruptive power outage.

“In February, a substation burnt to the ground after years of warnings to the city about its state of disrepair, leaving all of the factories in New Era, Springs, without power for weeks.

“In the industrial hub of Wadeville in Germiston, persistent outages over the past year have brought production to a halt, making it impossible for workers to do their jobs.

“Kempton Park has also been subjected to power outages for years, and last June a fire at the Glen Marais substation resulted in a six-day outage, while power outages are a weekly occurrence in Ward 92.

“Whereas in Germiston, large swathes were without power in early June after the staff went on a go-slow and switched off areas as a result of the metro’s failure to pay its overtime bills.”

According to Clarke, further underlying factors unearthed by the DA include poor contractor management, winning bidders subcontracting out their work in violation of the law, electricity substations that are in a critical condition from not being upgraded nor maintained and area managers who rarely go out on site to assist their teams.

“Problems also stem from underlying issues like underspending of budgets on priority repair and maintenance work, no monitoring system for overtime work done, poor HR systems to manage non-performing employees, and major electricity cables that are not repaired years after being logged as defective,” she said.

“The City of Ekurhuleni’s energy staff are stretched thinly and having to work overtime constantly to attend to its ailing power grid.

“The city also has a bloated management structure at the expense of service delivery.”

Read: REMINDER: Ekurhuleni to table its 2020/21 budget

Clarke stated that residents are being taxed heavily but staff are not hired to fulfill the municipality’s constitutional obligations.

“The National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa) estimates that municipalities on average spend 10 per cent of their salary budgets on staff for energy repairs, maintenance and reticulation, but Ekurhuleni spends just 3.7 per cent on this critical function and constitutional obligation,” she said.

“The City of Ekurhuleni recently admitted in Parliament to having been engaged in load-shedding practices despite receiving sufficient supply from Eskom.

“In some instances, the DA has established that the claims of cable theft by the metro are used as a cover-up for the fact that there has been a lack of maintenance on high-voltage cables.

“Every hour of outage in the City of Ekurhuleni is estimated to cost R1.6-billion in lost economic output and hundreds of thousands of jobs are being placed at risk by a municipality that is failing to meet its constitutional obligations.

“In order to address this crisis, the DA proposes that:

“Considering that the City of Ekurhuleni is the industrial heartland of Gauteng, thousands of jobs are being placed at risk by a municipality that is failing to meet its constitutional obligations,” said Clarke.

“When Eskom reintroduces load-shedding to Gauteng, it will further exacerbate Ekurhuleni’s pending economic collapse.”

Residents can sign the petition at https://petitions.da.org.za/p/takebackyourpower

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