With the little or no delivery of services mostly felt by the City of Ekurhuleni residents over the past year, new mayor Nkosindiphile Xhakaza unveiled the city’s R22.5 billion investment to bolster health and efficiency in waste management.
The commission of the seven state-of-art fleets will form part of the 97 fleets servicing the city and will form part of efforts to recapitalisation process to replace the old pool.
“The provision of the waste trucks will go a long way to respond to service delivery and illegal dumping,” Xhakaza said.
“This new fleet will improve the efficiency of this service and give confidence to residents that we are on the right track.”
The metro has over four million residents and has been marred with service delivery challenges.
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Previously the city confirmed that waste collection in some parts experienced interruptions due to fleet breakdowns, while parts of the city have been battling with sewage, and water supply issues.
In 2022-23, the metro received an unqualified audit opinion with material findings, while in the previous three years, it received an unqualified audit opinion.
Credit rating agency Moody’s downgraded the metro’s rating to junk status in the wake of the worsening financial position in March 2024.
Tembisa resident Mbali Moyo said illegal dumping in township was bad, with waste going weeks without being collected.
“Pickitup usually doesn’t come on days it’s supposed to collect waste.
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“Two weeks goes with no sight of them,” she said.
Xhakaza vowed his term in office will prioritise six key areas in local government to speed up efficient service delivery, while ensuring stability in the city.
However, Ekurhuleni resident Samson Ndlovu, who disputed this, blamed the challenges of the metro as a power play of politicians in council.
“The collapse in the city is caused by the continued fighting of these political parties who are pushing their own agendas. They don’t care about our providing services to us,” he said.
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